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Plays Schubert Tchaikovsky Bruch
 
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Plays Schubert Tchaikovsky Bruch [Hybrid SACD, SACD]

Maxim Rysanov Audio CD

Price: £20.57 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Amazon.com:  2 reviews
Yet another viola virtuoso. 7 Mar 2012
By L. Wheeler - Published on Amazon.com
Maxim Rysanov is another of the growing cadre of viola virtuosos. He joins Lawrence Power, Kim Kashkaskian, Nobuko Imai, Tabea Zimmermann, Yuri Bashmet, Paul Neubauer, Paul Coletti, Roberto Diaz, Gérard Caussé, Lars Anders Tompter, David Aaron Carpenter, as well as violinolists Pinchas Zuckerman, Maxim Vengerov, Yehudi Menuhin, Josef Suk, and David Oistrakh. (This list is far from complete.) So, for any reviewer to state that there are never more than three virtuoso violists in the world is simply not true. Another factual error is stating that the Bruch Romance was written for the violin. It was originally a viola work. As the saying goes, you are entitled to your opinion but not your own facts.

Questionable opinions include the assertion that the tone of the viola is of modest volume, lugubrious, whiny, resiny, or does not share the quality of the singing voice, as the violin does. One need only search YouTube for Mozart's Sinfonia Concertante for violin and viola, where the violists almost uniformly outplay their violin counterparts. The several CD recordings of the work only reinforce that fact. Such misplaced statements are now outdated and prejudicial. The writers or gullible readers of such should seriously consider enlightening their thinking, much as racial stereotypes have no place in current societal discourse.

This recording is highly recommended. You will also be rewarded by any recording by the violists listed above.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A star violist in transcriptions, not all equally successful 23 Aug 2011
By Santa Fe Listener - Published on Amazon.com
There are never more than three viola virtuosos in the world, and each has two obstacles to overcome. First is the modest volume of the viola and its lugubrious tone. The second is the lack of solo repertoire. Maxim Rysanov has solved the first obstacle beautifully - his sound is refined, his style musical, and his tone violin-like. He doesn't strive for greater volume, which is fairly impossible, but instead phrases so personally that your ear is captivated. (Yuri Bashmet, the most famous violist in the world, has declared, "he's another me!") to overcome the second obstacle, the lack of repertoire, Rysanov has devised various transcriptions form violin and cello works, as he's done here with these familiar Schubert and Tchaikovsky works.

The Arpeggione Sonata comes off best, I think. Replacing the piano with a string orchestra provides a uniform background that blends nicely with the viola, and the solo part can be made to lie gracefully for the soloist. Rysanov's interpretation is flowing and lyrical for the most part - he's turned the whole score into a kind of serenade - and the viola is naturally more nimble in the faster passages. His phrasing is sensitive but also lively, and I came away feeling that a very effective addition had been made to the viola repertoire. Bashmet has his own recording, with piano, but it's almost somber by comparison. Rysanov's sunniness is unique in my experience.

I'm not as enthusiastic about the Rococo Theme and Variations as transposed for cello. Sometimes the voicing of an instrument really matters; for that reason, viola transcriptions of the Elgar Cello Cto., for example, sound rather flimsy. Here Tchaikovsky heard a cello in is head, and moving the line upward seems to deprive the music of mellowness and weight. Defenders might argue that Rysanov adds elegance of the kind that fits a rococo theme. I can't really judge, in large part because I never liked the original very much to begin with. The album ends with an obscure work, Bruch's Romanze Op. 85, which falls into the camp of many another Romantic song for a solo instrument. One of the violin's great strengths is its resemblance to a singing voice, and the viola, with its whiny, resiny tone, doesn't share that quality. Rysanov is extremely musical, but as hard as he tries to sing, the line doesn't soar as it does on the violin, any more than the Beethoven or Brahms concerto would.

Other listeners may be completely satisfied, of course, but I'd recommend getting to know this admirable artist through true viola music first, such as the two Brahms sonatas, which he has recorded beautifully (each is packaged with more transcriptions, however).

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