Acte Préalable bills itself as the "leading label promoting 
                  Polish music and musicians". As Nikolai Potolovsky and 
                  Ivan Krizhanovsky are both Russians - though the latter was 
                  born in Kyiv - this new release is presumably a showcase for 
                  the soloists, especially cellist Jaroslaw Domzal, who gets four 
                  times as much space as Lubow Nawrocka for his biography and 
                  photo. 
                    
                  Domzal is certainly a fine cellist, at least on the evidence 
                  of this sparkling recital - though this is in fact his seventh 
                  CD for Act Préalable - and he is well supported by the more 
                  experienced Nawrocka in this, her second recording for the label. 
                  Yet what makes this CD special is the superb music of Krizhanovsky, 
                  whose surname, incidentally, is more frequently and more consonantly 
                  transliterated 'Kryzhanovsky', and especially of Potolovsky. 
                  Their two Cello Sonatas are expressive, lyrical, life-affirming, 
                  with a hint of nostalgia: musically situated somewhere in a 
                  triangle formed by Saint-Saëns, Brahms and Tchaikovsky. Not 
                  particularly Russian, nor indeed Polish, except that they are 
                  straight out of the mainstream of late Romanticism - and none 
                  the worse for it. 
                    
                  Neither composer has an entry in Oxford Music Online - both 
                  are mentioned in passing only in their dealings with more prominent 
                  names - and little if any of their music has been recorded before. 
                  In this regard Jan Jarnicki, a friend of Domzal's, deserves 
                  considerable plaudits for uncovering these scores. In his own 
                  words he spends "a vast amount of time scrutinising all 
                  kinds of publishing houses, libraries and other collections 
                  from all around the world in search of forgotten pieces of music 
                  somehow related to Poland." The connection in this case 
                  is tenuous, to say the least: "their names sounded very 
                  much Polish"; but their music speaks a pan-European language 
                  of drama, passion, delicious harmony and lovely melody. Potolovsky 
                  in particular, evidently a great pedagogue and excellent cellist, 
                  must rank as a great find: if this is what his op.2 is like 
                  - and the Cello Sonata really is outstanding - the rest of his 
                  music must be sought out and recorded for posterity without 
                  delay! 
                    
                  Sound quality is very impressive, and the string player's breathing 
                  - the marring of many a chamber recording - only very occasionally 
                  noticeable. There is a momentary blip in the slow movement of 
                  the Potolovsky, either electronic or caused by Domzal, it is 
                  hard to tell, but otherwise this is one of Acte Préalable's 
                  best efforts. The CD booklet has the usual AP quality glossy 
                  feel to it, with a canny advertisement for 18 previous releases! 
                  Domzal is good with the cello, but not at writing about it in 
                  English - his notes are an attempt, valiant but irksome, at 
                  an academic register that is 90% guff. He also asserts that 
                  Krizhanovsky and Potolovsky "came from Poland and worked 
                  in Russia", yet his own biography of the latter later states 
                  that he was born in Moscow and spent most of his life there. 
                  
                    
                  Acte Préalable discs rarely give more than an hour's worth of 
                  music, and this one is unfortunately no exception, but when 
                  the music is this genial, and performed so well, such matters 
                  must be overlooked. 
                    
                  Byzantion 
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk