Violin Piano

Franziska Pietsch & Josu de Solaun - Strauss & Shostakovich: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2019)

Franziska Pietsch & Josu de Solaun - Strauss & Shostakovich: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2019)
WEB FLAC (Tracks) 280 MB | Cover | 01:03:58
Classical | Label: audite Musikproduktion

The electrifying duo debut recording of violinist Franziska Pietsch and pianist Josu De Solaun features two masterpieces: the violin sonatas by Richard Strauss and Dmitri Shostakovich.
Franziska Pietsch & Josu de Solaun - Strauss & Shostakovich: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2019) [24/96]

Franziska Pietsch & Josu de Solaun - Strauss & Shostakovich: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2019)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time - 63:56 minutes | 1.22 GB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital Booklet

The electrifying duo debut recording of violinist Franziska Pietsch and pianist Josu De Solaun features two masterpieces: the violin sonatas by Richard Strauss and Dmitri Shostakovich.
Arabella Steinbacher & Robert Kulek - Brahms: Complete Works for Violin & Piano (2011)

Arabella Steinbacher & Robert Kulek - Brahms: Complete Works for Violin & Piano (2011)
XLD | FLAC (tracks+.cue, log) | Covers Included | 1:18:55 | 347 MB
Genre: Classical | Label: PentaTone Classics | Catalog: PTC 5186 367

This album features two major artists, past and present: Johannes Brahms and Arabella Steinbacher. However, even the best of artists have their less than perfect moments or works. These three sonatas, as played hereby Steinbacher and Kulek, come across as less exciting, lesser works by Brahms. The Sonata No. 1 sounds rather anemic as it begins (partly because of the recording quality), but Steinbacher chooses to play without much fullness or vibrato, even though she is playing a Stradivarius.
James Ehnes - Bartók: Works for Violin & Piano, Vol. 2 (2013) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

James Ehnes - Bartók: Works for Violin & Piano, Vol. 2 (2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time - 77:50 minutes | 869 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital booklet

James Ehnes has previously explored Béla Bartók’s concertos for violin and for viola, to great acclaim. This album is the second in his equally successful survey of Bartók’s chamber music for the violin. His accompanist, once more, is Andrew Armstrong, a pianist praised by critics for his passionate expression and dazzling technique.
Ryu Goto & Michael Dussek - Beethoven & Franck: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2015) [Official Digital Download 24/96]

Ryu Goto & Michael Dussek - Beethoven & Franck: Sonatas for Violin & Piano (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time - 85:48 minutes | 1.44 GB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Digital Booklet

22-year old Japanese-American violinist Ryu Goto is an international classical music superstar and one of the most successful artists of his generation, with a large and growing fan base in Asia, North America and Europe. Through his technique, dedication to his art and personal charisma, Ryu is changing the way people think about- and listen to classical music.
Anne Akiko Meyers, Rohan De Silva - Strauss, Franck: Sonatas For Violin & Piano (1993/2010)

Anne Akiko Meyers, Rohan De Silva - Strauss, Franck: Sonatas For Violin & Piano (1993/2010)
WEB | FLAC (tracks) - 258 MB | MP3 (CBR 320 kbps) - 140 MB | 55:14
Genre: Classical | Label: RCA Victor Red Seal

"I had not expected quite such unabashed, rose-tinted lyricism from Anne Akiko Meyers. There’s more to her playing than plushy vibrato and mechanistic brilliance; not that exhilaration or panache are minimised here, in this glowingly Romantic performance. Her Franck, too, ably justifies a more reflective, even cerebral approach, further distinguished by the tonal opulence of the playing. Not a performance to induce surges of adrenalin perhaps, but eminently well conceived and lucid… this remains a splendid performance overall, thanks in no small part to pianist Rohan de Silva."
Vadim Gluzman, Angela Yoffe - Lera Auerbach: 24 Preludes for Violin & Piano; T'filah; Postlude (2003)

Lera Auerbach: 24 Preludes for Violin & Piano; T'filah; Postlude (2003)
Vadim Gluzman (Violin), Angela Yoffe (Piano)

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 227 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 157 Mb | Artwork included
Classical, Contemporary | Label: BIS | # BIS-CD-1242 | Time: 01:08:04

Born in Chelyabinsk in 1973, Lera Auerbach defected from the former Soviet Union to the United States while still in her teens, and she has since garnered much attention as both pianist and composer, notably in her recent work with Gidon Kremer. Written in 1999, Auerbach's 24 Preludes for Violin and Piano amply showcase her stylistic leanings and wide emotional range. Clearly, she's imbibed from the Shostakovich/Schnittke watering hole, as we hear in the frequent sparse textures in extreme registers, petulant dynamic shifts, obsessive pedal points, and caustic, folk-oriented tunes. Auerbach also has figured out what makes Astor Piazzolla tick, and manages to personalize his sultry harmonic idiom. The most interesting moments occur when the composer's original voice pushes her influences out of the way, as in the sudden, unexpected violin cadenza that immediately follows Prelude No. 15's unrelenting dance. This leads to a threnody that gradually dematerializes into a high-register mist, and before you know it, Prelude No. 16 is over. The Postlude and solo violin piece also typify the ease with which Auerbach communicates her ideas. Vadim Gluzman and Angela Yoffe push their collective virtuosity sky-high. Such big playing requires the larger-than-life engineering BIS provides.
Ulm Wallin, Roland Pöntinen - Camille Saint-Saëns: Sonatas for Violin & Piano; Triptyque; Elégie (2004)

Ulm Wallin, Roland Pöntinen - Camille Saint-Saëns: Sonatas for Violin & Piano; Triptyque; Elégie (2004)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue) ~ 292 Mb | Total time: 65:42 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | # 999 946-2 | Recorded: 2002

A welcome addition to the catalog of Saint-Saëns' chamber music, this disc presents four of his pieces for violin and piano in a balanced and satisfying program. Violinist Ulf Wallin and pianist Roland Pöntinen have a sympathetic feeling for Saint-Saëns that shines through their polished performances, particularly in the two sonatas – works of such interest and vitality that it is inexplicable that they are infrequently performed and recorded. In its pensive lyricism and effervescent virtuosity, the Violin Sonata No. 1 shows the influences of Brahms and Mendelssohn. Wallin gives full bow to the long, noble melodies in the first two movements, and delivers the brilliant scherzo and finale with verve.
Tasmin Little, John Lenehan - C. Schumann, D. E. Smyth & A. Beach Works for Violin & Piano (2019)

Tasmin Little, John Lenehan - C. Schumann, D. E. Smyth & A. Beach Works for Violin & Piano (2019)
FLAC (tracks +booklet) | 01:11:29 | 308 Mb
Genre: Classical / Label: Chandos

Renowned violinist Tasmin Little returns to Chandos with a line-up of three women composers whose lives share some features but also significant differences that illustrate the complex lives of female musicians.
Franziska Pietsch / Detlev Eisinger - Prokofiev: Works For Violin & Piano (2016) [Digital Download 24bit/44.1kHz]

Franziska Pietsch / Detlev Eisinger - Prokofiev: Works For Violin & Piano (2016)
FLAC tracks 24bit/44.1kHz | Digital Booklet | 650MB + 5% Recovery
Studio Master, Official Digital Download, Audite

Following the successful release of the Grieg Violin Sonatas, Franziska Pietsch and her piano partner Detlev Eisinger now present music by Sergei Prokofiev on the audite label. His works reflect facets of her own biography to a significant degree. As an emerging talent in the GDR, Franziska Pietsch enjoyed special state support; her musical training was thus initially shaped by the Eastern European school, bringing Prokofiev's music close to her heart. His two Violin Sonatas appear as two contrasting poles within his oeuvre - her life has also moved between extremes. The state support led to early success in the GDR. However, her father's escape to the West in 1984 was followed by two years of reprisals by the regime, intensively shaping Franziska Pietsch's understanding of music: deprived of any possibility of playing concerts or taking lessons, her chosen path towards hope - against desperation, refusal, fear and despotism - led inwards.