Solo
Zoltan KODÁLY (1882-1967)
Sonata, Op.8 (1915) [32:02]
Osvaldo GOLIJOV (b.1960)
Omaramor (1991) [8:15]
Gaspar CASSADÓ (1897-1966)
Suite per violoncello (1926) [16:10]
Bright SHENG (b.1955)
Seven Tunes Heard in China (1995) [19:41]
Alisa Weilerstein (cello)
rec. Teldex Studio, Berlin, Germany, 2013.
DECCA 478 5296 [76:08]
Alisa Weilerstein’s declared aim with this solo
debut disc was to ‘record some of my favourite pieces, and each one
of them has a folk element, a fantasy element and a meditative element.’
Much of Kodály’s sonata certainly fulfils the meditative remit and
also includes some carefully woven folk references. Perhaps it is unsurprising
that, following Bach’s sensational cello suites, almost no one was
tempted to try to meet the challenge represented by those amazing pieces
during the ensuing two hundred years. Maybe they felt, as Brahms did when
trying to write a symphony, that Beethoven was always at his shoulder reminding
him of the standard he should have as an aim.
As Weilerstein points out the cello never had its Paganini to push its boundaries
until Pablo Casals came along. Then during the First World War Zoltan Kodály
wrote his mighty sonata, a work of tremendous scope, full of heartfelt anguish
at the senseless futility of that devastating conflict. For me there is
no instrument better able to express despair and the deepest sorrow than
the cello. This sonata is packed full of feelings of unbearable grief. The
cello almost takes on a human personality as it wears these emotions on
its musical sleeve. Kodály said of this work that “in twenty-five
years no cellist will be accepted into the world of cellists who does not
play my piece.” While some might interpret this as self-opinionated,
once you have heard it you can only agree that it is a statement that makes
perfect sense. Indeed in 1956 it was made a set-piece for the Casals Competition
in Mexico City.
Argentinean-Jewish composer Osvaldo Golijov drew as inspiration for his
piece Omaramor the songs of the legendary Argentinean tango singer
Carlos Gardel who, though he was killed in a plane crash in 1935, is still
very much alive in the hearts of Buenos Aireans. As Helen Wallace explains
in the liner-notes Golijov takes as the basis for this work one of Gardel’s
most iconic songs My Beloved Buenos Aires. He treats the chords
of this music as if they were the streets and the music wanders through
them revealing the song’s melody.
From Hungary and Argentina we arrive in Spain and music by Catalan composer
Gaspar Cassadó, a student of Casals. His cello sonata, though its opening
sarabande clearly draws on Kodály’s model, soon shows its
Iberian origins. The Catalan dance the sardana dominates the second
movement then steps aside for others. The work closes with a spirited jota
which has variants from most Spanish regions. The music is richly scored
with the cello never seeming alone. It mimics an accordion in the sardana
and delights in the whirling jota. This music will surely whet
anyone’s appetite to hear more by Cassadó.
Bright Sheng is one of those composers who ended up drawing strength from
a harsh decision by the State during the disastrous Cultural Revolution.
They sent him away to a province close to Tibet and this resulted in his
music being informed by the folk music of many regions. The experience set
him on a lifelong quest to note down as many of these regional sounds as
possible — a life’s work in such a vast country. These delightful
and charming pieces are extremely evocative of everything you think of when
it comes to Chinese music. When the two stringed ban hu is invoked
its uniquely oriental sound leaves us in no doubt as to where we are. We
are taken on a journey to seven regions from Tibet to Taiwan, from Mongolia
to Yunnan. These folk-inspired melodies vary from delicate sounds in the
elegiac Little cabbage to the stumbling drunk described in The
Drunken Fisherman. The latter calls upon the cellist to use a guitar
pick, thumb and fingernail in imitation of the Qin: seven string Chinese
zither. The cello’s highest register opens Diu Diu Dong describing
a train journey as the music rattles along. The piece ends with a “hiss”
from the player to evoke escaping steam as the train pulls to a halt. The
Mongolian Pastoral Ballade is a mixture of melancholia and spiky
rhythms. The delicacy of its sad opening returns to close the piece. The
final item is based upon a Tibetan Dance and this time the cellist
has to tap the top of the instrument to invoke a drum. This knockabout dance
radiates plenty of energy and finishes with a flourish.
As a solo debut disc Alisa Weilerstein has chosen a widely varied programme
that showcases her astonishing virtuosity. It also introduces the listener
to repertoire that is not often heard, more’s the pity. This is a
thoroughly winning programme and I hope it’s not the only solo disc
she makes. There is much else to go at in addition to those ‘other
cello suites’.
Steve Arloff