27 Feb 2024

Bella Hristova and Michael Houstoun in recital

From Music Alive, 8:00 pm on 27 February 2024

Violinist Bella Hristova and pianist continue their magical partnership with a recital in Auckland to celebrate the release of their new CD of the complete violin sonatas by Brahms.

Pianist Michael Houstoun and violinist Bella Hristova

Michael Houstoun and Bella Hristova Photo: Monika Hill

RAVEL: Sonate posthume

This is the lesser-heard Violin Sonata by Maurice Ravel  – the 'Posthumous Sonata', published after his death but written as a student when he was in Gabriel Fauré’s composition class at the Paris Conservatory.

It’s a shortish work in one movement. Actually it’s believed that Ravel intended it to be the first of a multi-movement sonata but he never completed that.

FAURE: Violin Sonata No 1 in A Op 13

This work has remained one of Fauré’s most loved pieces and it made an immediate impact when it was first heard in 1876. It marked a turning point in his career.

The older composer Camille Saint-Saëns was full of praise: “This sonata has everything that will seduce the gourmet: novel forms, exquisite modulations, uncommon tone colours, the use of the most unexpected rhythms. And hovering above all this is a magic which envelops the work and brings the masses of ordinary listeners to accept the wildest audacities as something perfectly natural.”

The work has four movements.

BRAHMS: Violin Sonata No 3 in D minor Op 108

Brahms wrote this sonata (the third of his three) between 1886 and 1888 – it’s one of his later works – all of his symphonies and concertos are behind him and there are only a few works still to come. He’s at the height of his compositional powers and this work is tight and muscular, but also – especially in the Adagio second movement – lyrical and tender. He dedicated it to his friend and colleague Hans von Bülow.

Recorded by RNZ Concert in Auckland Concert Chamber, 4 September 2023
Producer: Tim Dodd
Engineer: Adrian Hollay