Ross Harris: Symphony No. 5 & Violin Concerto No. 1 Ilya Gringolts
Album Info
Album Veröffentlichung:
2016
HRA-Veröffentlichung:
05.07.2016
Label: Naxos
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Concertos
Interpret: Ilya Gringolts, Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra & Garry Walker
Komponist: Ross Harris (1945-)
Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)
- 1 Part 1 05:10
- 2 Part 2 05:27
- 3 Part 3 04:47
- 4 Part 4 04:39
- 5 Part 5 02:35
- 6 I. Adagio 1 10:40
- 7 II. The line-up 02:21
- 8 III. Scherzo 1 06:08
- 9 IV. Candlelight 04:45
- 10 V. Scherzo 2 05:33
- 11 VI. Lessons learned from my father 03:28
- 12 VII. Adagio 2 09:29
Info zu Ross Harris: Symphony No. 5 & Violin Concerto No. 1
Ross Harris’s Fifth Symphony was inspired by the poems of Panni Palasti, many of which reflect her experiences during the siege of Budapest in World War II. Forming the emotional core of the work and set to gentle melodies against hushed, sophisticated orchestration, the three songs form a stark contrast with the violent and disturbing imagery of the two Scherzos and the austere beauty of the opening and closing Adagios. The beautifully textured Violin Concerto hovers tantalisingly between tonality and atonality, with the soloist rarely out of the limelight, decorating and rhapsodising on the material.
„Ross Harris, then aged sixty, decided to dedicate his life to composition, and in the space of ten years has produced five symphonies and two major concertos. Born in New Zealand in 1945, he has now found himself in a world where music is at a crossroads, a group of internationally acclaimed composers having turned the clock back to reconnect with music that was created in a world of tonality. He seems to have opted to place a foot in both camps, his mix of melodic invention and atonality probably disconcerting to audiences, yet he uses it with consummate skill. The Fifth Symphony is moulded around poems by Panni Palasti, a survivor of the Second World War in Budapest, the cold and uncompromising opening movement setting the scene for pictures of a child living through those years. The scherzos that separate the three songs for mezzo-soprano are vicious and war related, the final Adagio recalling turmoil before peace is restored as the work evaporates into silence. The Violin Concerto could well have come from another composer, its parentage seemingly in the Polish avant garde of the late Twentieth Century. Fragments that open the work, played by the lone violin, setting a scene of withdrawn atonality that continues in all five parts of the score. Though active almost throughout, it does not afford the soloist a virtuoso role, Ilya Gringolts making light of technical challenges, as we hear in the whirlwind fourth part. Assuming a child-like voice for two of the songs, Sally-Anne Russell ideally pictures the young Panni, and you feel the Auckland Philharmonia—with conductors Garry Walker (in the concerto) and Eckehard Stier—are dedicated Harris advocates. Good modern sound with admirable transparency even in the densely scored passages.“ (David’s Review Corner)
Ilya Gringolts, violin
Sally-Anne Russell, mezzo-soprano
Auckland Philharmonia Orchestra
Garry Walker, conductor
Ilya Gringolts
Despite his youth, Ilya Gringolts can already look back on sixteen extraordinarily successful years in his violinist career. His inquisitiveness regarding new musical challenges has shown him to be an outstanding musical personality.
After studying violin and composition in Saint Petersburg with Tatiana Liberova and Jeanna Metallidi, he attended the Juilliard School of Music where he studied with Itzhak Perlman. In 1998 he won the International Violin Competition Premio Paganini, as the youngest first prize winner in the history of the competition. As a soloist he devotes himself particularly to contemporary and seldom played works. He has premiered compositions by Peter Maxwell Davies, Augusta Read Thomas, Christophe Bertrand and Michael Jarrell. In addition, he is interested in historical performance practice. At the Verbier Festival in summer 2010, he played the complete cycle of the Bach Sonatas on a baroque violin, accompanied by Masaaki Suzuki. He is also first violinist of the Gringolts Quartet, which he founded in 2008.
In the 2014/15 season Ilya Gringolts will again perform at prestigious concert halls such as Musikverein in Vienna, Concertgebouw in Amsterdam and Wigmore Hall in London. As a soloist he has been invited to perform with the orchestra of the Teatro Comunale di Bologna, City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, Copenhagen Philharmonic, Adelaide Symphony and Auckland Philharmonic Orchestra, with whom he will also record the violin concerto of the New Zealander composer Ross Harris.
In the past years, Ilya Gringolts has performed with leading orchestras around the world, such as the Chicago Symphony, London Philharmonic, Saint Petersburg Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Melbourne Symphony, NHK Symphony, Mahler Chamber Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, Birmingham Symphony, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, BBC Symphony, Sao Paulo Orchestra, Israel Philharmonic, Hallé Orchestra and both orchestras of SWR. Highlights of the 2013/14 season included projects with the Singapore Symphony, Bamberg Symphony, Warszaw Philharmonic, BBC Scottish Symphony, Taipei Symphony and Columbus Symphony Orchestras.
Ilya Gringolts can be just as frequently heard in recital programmes. He is a regular guest at the festivals in Lucerne, Kuhmo, Colmar and Bucharest (Enescu Festival), as well as at the Serate Musicali in Milan and Saint Petersburg Philharmonic. For his chamber music projects, he collaborates with artists such as Yuri Bashmet, Lynn Harrell, Diemut Poppen, Nicolas Angelich, Itamar Golan, Peter Laul, Nicholas Hodges and Jörg Widmann.
After numerous critically praised recordings for Deutsche Grammophon, BIS and Hyperion, Ilya Gringolts has with three recent releases on the Onyx label, devoted himself to the music of Robert Schumann: the violin sonatas 1-3 with Peter Laul (2010), the piano trios, played with Dmitry Kouzov and Peter Laul (2011), and the string quartets and piano quintet with the Gringolts Quartet and Peter Laul (2011). Last year his recording of the 24 caprices for solo violin by Paganini on Orchid Classics (2013) received many outstanding reviews, including in The Strad and Gramophone. In 2006, the CD Taneyev – Chamber Music together with Mikhail Pletnev, Vadim Repin, Nobuko Imai and Lynn Harrell received a Gramophone Award.
Apart from his position as violin professor at the Zurich Academy of the Arts, he is also a Violin International Fellow at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow. Ilya Gringolts plays a 1718-1720 Stradivarius, which was made available to him by a private collection.
Nicola Guerini
was born in Verona. He studied Piano, Organ and Organ Composition, Conducting and Composition at the Conservatory C.Pollini, Padua and at the Conservatory G.Verdi, Milan; he then perfected his studies at the Accademia Chigiana, at the Mozarteum Salzburg, at the Accademia Pescarese with Donato Renzetti. In 2010 he achieved a Master of Arts in Music Conducting at Lugano Musikhochschule (Switzerland) with Giorgio Bernasconi and Arturo Tamayo. His début was at 24 as composer and conductor for the Fondazione Arena, Verona. He was assistant to Ralf Weikart, Giorgio Bernasconi and Donato Renzetti in Italy and international productions at Teatro alla Scala, Teatro dell’Opera Roma and Lyric Opera Chicago. He has taken part in festivals and prestigious concert seasons with important orchestras including the Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma, the Rousse Philharmonic Orchestra, the Targu Mures Philarmonia, the HRT Zagreb Orchestra, the Divertimento Ensemble, the Mozart Chamber Orchestra, the Ensemble ‘900 di Lugano, the ICARUS Ensemble, the Targu Mures Philarmonia Orchestra, the Sofia Philarmonie, the Berliner Symphoniker and the PKF Prague Philarmonia.
He is President of the "Peter Maag" Music Fund and artistic director of the lyric opera laboratory “La Bottega”, which revives Maag’s well-known workshop for young talents. He has founded Maria Callas International Competition and Maria Callas International Festival.
Booklet für Ross Harris: Symphony No. 5 & Violin Concerto No. 1