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            Camille SAINT–SAËNS (1835 
              – 1921)   
              Cello Sonata No.1 in C minor, op.32 (1872) [21:34]  
              Le Cygne (Le Carnaval des animaux) (1886) [2:47]  
              Cello Sonata No.2 in F, op.123 (1905) [36:03]  
              Le Cygne (Le Carnaval des animaux) (1886) (transcr. Leopold Godowsky 
              (1870 – 1938) (1927)) [2:49]  
                
              Mats Lidström (cello), Bengt Forsberg (piano)  
              rec. 10-12 April 1999, St George’s, Brandon Hill, Bristol, DDD  
              Re–issue of Hyperion CDA67095  
                
              HYPERION HELIOS CDH55342 [63:46]   
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                  We still seem to think of Saint–Saëns as the composer of a fine 
                  Symphony (No. 3), a brilliant Piano Concerto (No. 2), an equally 
                  brilliant Violin Concerto (No. 3), two virtuoso pieces for violin 
                  and orchestra (Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso and 
                  Havanaise), a handful of symphonic poems and the ‘Grand 
                  Zoological Fantasy’, Carnival of the Animals. All those 
                  pieces are more than worthy of our attention, but they are such 
                  a small part of this prolific and fascinating composer’s work. 
                  What about the chamber music? There are violin and cello sonatas, 
                  string quartets, piano trios and other pieces, but when do we 
                  get the chance to hear them, except on isolated recordings? 
                  So full marks for this re–issue bringing the Cello Sonatas back 
                  to our attention.  
                     
                  The 1st Sonata is a big and 
                  bold, passionate work. Lidström and Forsberg throw themselves 
                  into the emotional maelstrom with relish and savour every moment. 
                  Someone hearing this for the first time might be surprised at 
                  just how ardent Saint–Saëns can be. Certainly, you won’t find 
                  this kind of unbridled fervour in too many of his works. This 
                  performance is obsessive in its intensity and the close recording 
                  helps to heighten the emotional nature of the music. This is 
                  a superb work which should be in every cellist’s repertoire. 
                  The disk is worth buying for this performance and work alone, 
                  it’s so good.  
                     
                  The 2nd Sonata is a huge work 
                  in four movements, the second being an extended set of variations. 
                  As with the 1st Sonata there’s 
                  a rich vein of lyricism, but here it’s tempered with more introspective 
                  music, and thus there’s much more variety in the piece. Certainly 
                  the first movement would be unbearable were it not for these 
                  oases of calm. It’s almost over–the–top in its headlong rush 
                  and one feels that Saint–Saëns had a hard time managing to get 
                  all the notes on the page, so quickly do new ideas pop up and 
                  demand our attention. The second movement is a scherzo with 
                  variations, and what a fine set it is!, the ghostly theme returning 
                  breathlessly at the end. The slow movement is more a love song 
                  than the intense outpouring of the earlier work, and it’s none 
                  the worse for that. The finale is a fast run with a dazzling 
                  ending, where all passions are finally spent. This is a marvellous 
                  work and deserving of our time.  
                     
                  Between the Sonatas is a beautifully restrained, and totally 
                  unsentimental, account of The Swan, from Carnival 
                  of the Animals. The surprise of the disk is the arrangement 
                  of the same piece by piano virtuoso Leopold Godowsky, for I 
                  was expecting some over-the-top piano showpiece but was astonished, 
                  and very happy to find, a delicate version, using the whole 
                  range of the cello with an unobtrusive accompaniment. Quite 
                  simply, I cannot praise this disk too highly.  
                     
                  Bob Briggs  
                     
                   
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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