This is a fine conjunction 
                  of sonatas inspired, less than a decade apart, by the leonine 
                  Ysa˙e. The Lekeu has always held a respected if somewhat aloof 
                  place in the catalogue, the Magnard much less so. Among the 
                  pairings to have essayed the latter, two in particular stand 
                  out; Dumay/Collard on EMI and Zimansky/Keller on Accord. The 
                  newcomer belts it out in record time, shaving around about three 
                  minutes off the Accord pairing and four off the French performance. 
                  The problem with the Magnard is its association of Franckian 
                  cyclical procedure and a certain thematic diffusion, which can 
                  lead to a degree of static phrasing and confusion. So the instinct 
                  of the Muresanu/Ciocarlie duo is to try to drive relatively 
                  quickly through those areas of maximum difficulty the better 
                  to convey Magnard’s syntax with a greater sense of spine and 
                  logic. It’s still not a simple task.
                Magnard’s Franckian inheritance carries with 
                  it distinct foreshadowing of Delius and even, in the first movement, 
                  of Ireland’s later violin sonatas, particularly the second. 
                  But Magnard’s elastic sense of lyricism is less definitive than 
                  theirs and performers need to sculpt the lines with great care 
                  to project them with assurance and conviction. This the new 
                  pairing often does, though there are equally moments when those 
                  little explosive wellings-up of eruptive emotion are slightly 
                  glossed over and where the other pairings’ more considered tempi 
                  pay slightly richer rewards in expanding the lyricism. The elusive 
                  but impressionist harmonies are most vivid in the slow movement 
                  which is here taken at a confident tempo, whereas in the brief 
                  scherzo – a cleansingly quick and eventful one – rustic drive 
                  alternates with lyrical reflection. Magnard’s propensity for 
                  moments of Franckian hothouse compression are consolidated in 
                  the intense slow introduction to the finale though when he slips 
                  into routine fugato at around 5’00 one’s heart sinks. The ear 
                  is always engaged though, with baroque hints and with moments 
                  redolent of some of Fauré’s more extrovert chanson.  
                Tonally the Muresanu/Ciocarlie 
                  are not as dashing or as involved as Zimansky/Keller or as suave 
                  and aristocratic as Dumay/Collard but their bracing tempi may 
                  tempt those who have previously found the Magnard a tough nut 
                  to crack. 
                Coupling it with 
                  the Lekeu makes sense for all sorts of reasons  - the Dumay/Collard 
                  was coupled with the Franck and the Accord was an otherwise 
                  all-Magnard disc. Here competition is tough. Collectors will 
                  know of or have Bobesco/Gentry (Bobesco was always a powerful 
                  advocate of this music), Kantorow/Rouvier, Oliveira/Koenig (on 
                  Biddulph - but not a real contender) and Poulet/Lee. Some may 
                  have encountered Hirschhorn/Eynden but I haven’t. Historical 
                  collectors will have the Menuhins’ (Yehudi and Hephzibah) 1930s 
                  recording now on Naxos. But I still have a real admiration for 
                  old friends Dumay and Collard (EMI). Their greater tonal colouration 
                  and vivacity wins the day here, making the newcomers sound relatively 
                  reserved and uncommitted. Speeds are broadly similar but the 
                  vivacity of Dumay’s rhythmic attacks and the depth and control 
                  of Collard’s chordal playing are all very impressive. The relatively 
                  slow vibrato of Muresanu sounds wan in comparison and the cloudy 
                  sound of the piano might be a recording feature and might equally 
                  be a result of over-pedalling. These differences are cemented 
                  in the slow movement where the newcomers sounds rather directionless 
                  set against the French partnership’s acutely romantic instincts 
                  and gift for lyric phrasing, prominent among which is Dumay’s 
                  subtle command of right hand inflexions.
                So a mixed blessing, 
                  this. There’s a bracing if not always very romantically expressive 
                  Magnard and a somewhat lacklustre Lekeu. I’d urge you to hear 
                  the Magnard however whichever performance you take – the Accord 
                  is the most obviously involving but this newcomer does well 
                  to minimise some of its more windy rhetoric.
                
              Jonathan Woolf  
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