Ysaÿe: 6 Sonatas for Solo Violin, Op. 27

Regular price $8.49
Label
Navona
Release Date
April 10, 2020
Format
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    Featuring
    • COMPOSER
      YSAYE, EUGENE
    • PERFORMER
      Thomas Bowes
    Product Details
    • RELEASE DATE
      April 10, 2020
    • UPC
      896931005814
    • CATALOG NUMBER
      NV6281
    • LABEL
      Navona
    • NUMBER OF DISCS
      1
    • GENRE

Acclaimed English violinist Thomas Bowes seems to have a penchant for thoroughness and completion. Known and praised for his complete recording of all J. S. Bach's sonatas and partitas, the European virtuoso has now taken it upon himself to embark on another quest for totality. This time, it is the six sonatas by Belgian violinist Eug�ne Ysa�e (1858-1931), presented on Bowes' new album, EUG�NE YSA�E: SIX SONATAS FOR SOLO VIOLIN. As one would expect from Bowes, they are played to passionate perfection. Ysa�e, hailed in his time as no less than the "King of the Violin", is a formidable figure to take on for any modern musician. He was famed not only for precision but more especially for a deeply affecting, quasi-supernatural power of communication. A man of immense generosity and largeness of spirit It is difficult to imagine any violinist adequately reproducing Ysa�e's compositions and this special aura. Doubly so if one considers the background of the Six Sonatas for Violin. They were written at a crucial point late in life. Plagued by illness and doubt and finding himself increasingly cut off from playing his beloved instrument as he would wish, this deep frustration found expression in this encapsulation of his art. In short, these works - all sketched out at white heat in a 24-hour period and hair-raisingly complex and difficult for the player - are an embodiment of the man. Thankfully, Bowes not only possesses the technical mastery to command every playing requirement; he also approaches these works with a great sense of empathy towards their creator. It is this attribute which affords him the rarest of insights into Ysa�e's violinistic mastermind. In fact, Bowes plays with such zest and clarity that the listener occasionally needs to be reminded that these are indeed sonatas for solo violin, not for an ensemble of two or three musicians.