Review: Fauré: Nocturnes & Barcarolles (Marc-André Hamelin, Cathy Fuller)
Hamelin colours Fauré’s night music with both light and shade.
Hamelin colours Fauré’s night music with both light and shade.
The two British pianists talk about Limelight’s 2021 Chamber Recording of the Year.
Emily Sun shines in French repertoire for violin and piano.
Fascinating collection of rarities from the romantic side of Mons. Fauré.
A radiant, bright young trio whose repertoire risks pay off in spades.
A hybrid favourite gets the intimate chamber treatment.
Ahead of its season opener, Bel a cappella's Anthony Pasquill discusses giving the Australian premiere of a work by Caroline Shaw.
A WWI artefact offers a song of sanity in a world gone mad.
A reliable repertoire graces the new self-titled release from Charmian Gadd and Phillip Shovk. Recorded two years ago at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the album features three sonatas for violin and piano. All in major keys, the works offer a chance to carve out an hour-or-so and indulge in some fine 19th-century music. Gadd’s timbre on violin is luscious with high frequencies in the opening Brahms Violin Sonata No 1 in G. Shovk burbles away with a neat brush of the keys, which satisfies the need for a fuller and warmer foundation of sound. In his notes, Shovk informs us this work is in the style of Beethoven – perhaps a reason he chose the master’s Sonata No 10 in G to complete the album. But sandwiched between these two legendary composers is Fauré: his Violin Sonata No 1 in A. A pivotal work in the chamber repertoire, Fauré’s music is composed and performed with affection (except during the rumbling momentum of the Allegro vivo). The Beethoven eventually arrives with a frisky little trill, instruments echoing each other before joining in rhythmic unison. In this Allegro moderato, Gadd and Shovk bare their abilities to respond acutely to each other’s musical approaches….
Highlights include world premieres, an Indigenous dance collaboration, and the chamber version of Fauré’s Requiem. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in
Believing in being Franck: A Polish detour adds spice to Little and Lane's French day out.
Considering her sizable discography, 2015’s Fleurs was surprisingly Carolyn Sampson’s first song recital. It turned out a corker and set a very high bar for a follow-up. I can happily report that this release comfortably vaults that bar. The clever thematic programming continues, this time in various settings of Symbolist Decadent Paul Verlaine’s moonlit evocations. Debussy’s setting of Fêtes Galantes, Ariettes Oubliées and Fauré’s La Bonne Chanson are old favourites along with Hahn’s lovely L’heure Exquise and Tous Deux, but the five settings by Poldowski, aka Régine Wieniawski (daughter of the violin composer), are an unfamiliar treat; accomplished vocal writing, gorgeous harmonies and imaginative accompaniments – her En Sourdine is delicious. The performances are breathtakingly beautiful. As expected from the impeccable Sampson there is some astonishingly pure and precisely controlled vocalism, but lest she be typecast as an early music specialist there has been a perceptible increase in richness and colour over the last few years. Her delivery is mostly intimate and confessional, the full voice used sparingly so at key moments when it opens out and expands the result is spine-tingling. She has an ideal partner in Joseph Middleton, a superb musician with a keen ear whose hypersensitive touch…
The 92-year-old pianist talks Fauré, Ravel, Nazi Germany and feeling the hand of God. Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in