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SEEN AND HEARD UK CONCERT REVIEW
Guillaume Lekeu: Violin Sonata in G (1892/1893)
Ravel: Violin Sonata in G major (1923/1927) 
        
        Alina Ibragimova is a very exciting young violinist who is carving out a 
        significant career for herself. I have heard her on several occasions 
        and have always been impressed by her virtuosity; however, I have been 
        less impressed by her musicality. This concert was a good example of her 
        performing technique. Lekeu's marvellous Sonata, written for Ysaÿe, is a 
        large-scale work, romantic and generously melodious; it is not an 
        aggressive work, nor is there anything overtly violent about it. 
        Ibragimova, however, seems always to see music as a matter of 
        confrontation and that is not what the Lekeu Sonata is all about. This 
        performance was well executed technically, but the soul of the work was 
        never touched upon. The finale, instead of being an exciting rush of 
        great forward momentum, was here a garbled and too hasty scuttle. 
        
        Ravel's Sonata fared slightly better. The first movement was suitably 
        nonchalant and the disturbing undercurrents were nicely underplayed. The 
        blues of the middle movement started well but at the climax the furious 
        pizzicato of the soloist was out of control and instead of a dirty 
        nightclub atmosphere there was far too much meaningless aggression. The 
        moto perpetuo finale came off best of all three movements because it 
        requires technique above musicality. 
        
        Ibramigova and Tiberghien make a good duo partnership and they could 
        develop into a fine ensemble once Ibramigova has worked on her 
        interpretations and turned away from the purely technical. 
        
        Bob Briggs
      
