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			Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
 Seven Variations in E flat major on theme Bei Männern, welche Liebe fühlen from the opera The Magic Flute by Mozart for cello and piano, WoO 46 (1801) [9:43]
 Kreutzer Sonata in A major, Op.47 (1802-03), arr. for cello and piano by Karl Czerny [40:50]
 Sonata in D major for cello and piano, Op.102 No.2 (1815) [21:03]
 
             
            Ivan Monighetti (cello), Pavel Gililov (piano)
 
			rec. September 2008, Witold Lutoslawski Polish Radio Concert Studio, Warsaw. DDD
 
             
            DUX 0704    [71:37]  
			 
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                  Beethoven’s music can serve as the basis for the perfect “motivation 
                  tape”. This disc will surely raise your spirits. The music is 
                  full of optimism, and this performance is fittingly buoyant. 
                  Monighetti and Gililov present a high-voltage reading from two 
                  strong voices: Gililov’s piano sound is round and concentrated, 
                  Monighetti’s cello is generous and radiant. Intonation is characterised 
                  by a sense of natural breathing and perfect articulation.  
                   
                  The disc opens with the Bei Männern Variations. The composer 
                  is as inventive as ever, and the music is bright and diverse. 
                  The more transparent pages are Mozartean – Classical, not Romantic. 
                  But the stubborn, Ländlerish stomp of the final variation is 
                  unmistakably Beethoven. The musicians play with lively tempi 
                  and faultless balance.  
                   
                  Karl Czerny arranged the Kreutzer for cello – and we 
                  get a bloody good cello sonata! The difference is apparent, 
                  especially in the first movement, which is no longer as hysterical 
                  as the original. Boy, I miss those desperate shrieks from the 
                  violin! The cello pictures a sea storm, while the violin had 
                  the storm rising to the skies. If in the original version the 
                  violin usurped absolute power, here the piano part is the one 
                  with the higher pitch, and has greater prominence. In the slow 
                  movement the cello part is rather elevated so it loses little 
                  in the way of innocent “larkishness”. What the cello can give 
                  in return are its warmth and depth, and of these Monighetti 
                  shares plenty. The cello is also a more suitable accompanist, 
                  when the piano takes the leading role. The viscous slow variation 
                  is marvelous, and the quiet afterglow of the last variation 
                  is magical. I don’t see a significant variance from the violin 
                  version in the last movement – a happy, unstoppable tarantella. 
                   
                   
                  The first movement of Beethoven’s Fifth Cello Sonata 
                  is heroic and gallant. That’s the kind of music that Strauss 
                  in Don Quixote called “a knightly theme”. The 
                  second movement, the only real slow complete episode in Beethoven’s 
                  cello sonatas, is marked Adagio con molto sentimento d’affetto, 
                  and with good reason. It is lugubrious, yet with a feeling of 
                  acceptance. It is similar to the slow movements of Beethoven’s 
                  last piano sonatas, but also to another Adagio affettuoso 
                  - the sad slow movement of the First Quartet. In contrast, 
                  the last movement sounds a bit lacking in emotion. Its intricate 
                  fugal development gives more to the brain than to the heart 
                  – maybe the performers could add something here. Anyway, it 
                  is not so long as to become boring.  
                   
                  The disc is very well recorded, and the cello sound is admirably 
                  clean. The liner-note in Polish and English contains an interesting 
                  essay on the three works, although I suspect that some of the 
                  logic was lost in translation.    
                Oleg Ledeniov  
                  
                  
                  
                 
             
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