This CD brings together five attractive works for cello and piano by
Alfred Schnittke. The pieces, while demonstrating the stylistic diversity for which the composer is famous, largely share a tone of nostalgia, of wistfulness for what has been lost, or of anger at the fact of its loss. The two sonatas for cello and piano in particular bring together those strong feelings in alternating movements. The first sonata is reminiscent of
Shostakovich in its unsettling juggling of extreme expressive elements, and it retains significant elements of tonality. The second is a darker work, and mostly dispenses with tonality, voicing its grief and ironic humor in an uncompromisingly astringent tonal language. The brief Musica Nostalgica has none of the bitterness of the sonatas -- it's a cheerfully skewed minuet that playfully rides roughshod over Baroque conventions. Epilogue for cello, piano, and tape, an excerpt from the ballet Peer Gynt, is the album's most extreme example of
Schnittke's polystylism. It uses grinding dissonance, melancholy Bergian atonality, and a taped wordless chorus murmuring untroubled consonances in the service of a unified and powerfully expressive whole. The fact that
Schnittke can pull these diverse elements into a cohesive musical and emotional experience is a testimony to his skill and vision.
Cellist
Torleif Thedéen and pianist
Roland Pöntinen give their all to the music. There is no question of their technical skills in pulling off these virtuosic pieces, and their investment in the music's expressive demands is fully persuasive.
Thedéen is particularly eloquent in the music's anguished and elegiac improvisatory-sounding sections. The recorded sound is excellent -- clean and atmospheric, with good balance between the performers.