This excellent disc includes some of Schnittke's most accomplished violin
	works. His pieces are not instantly accessible - their eclecticism can be
	disconcerting - but his fragmented use of many familiar forms and stylistic
	ideas is easy to follow (the concerto and sonata on this disc both remain
	rooted strictly in a classical form). However, these polystylistic structures
	are complicated further by Schnittke's flexible 20th-century approach to
	tonality - these in turn causes the harsh dissonances that are at first apparent.
	
	Schnittke's use of 'polystylism' poses an interesting philosophical argument:
	he argues that, in the modern age, 'our concepts of time and space have undergone
	drastic transformations' and therefore the 'idea of the universal character
	of culture, of its integrity, seems particularly apt'. Schnittke has a point:
	in an age of rampant globalisation and international communication, a degree
	of cultural fusion is bound to occur, and his composition can be seen as
	a statement of this.
	
	With this in mind, the Violin Concerto No. 3 does not seem especially
	avant-garde; the wind textures of the first movement Moderato often
	resemble Strauss, and dissonance is caused mainly by the violin line grating
	against the orchestral harmony. The Agitato second movement feels
	appropriately uncomfortable, and the forceful, unsettled temperament always
	pushes the piece forward. The writing becomes intensely anguished as it dissolves
	into the third movement, Andante, which is the focal point of the
	Concerto; the opening drone notes of the soloist are deeply haunting, and
	are precursors to the dark, foreboding ending, where Schnittke reveals an
	altogether more ominous compositional voice. The Moscow Tchaikovsky Symphony
	Orchestra are immaculate throughout, and Michail Kukushkin elicits from them
	an enchanting sense of subtlety and nuance. The same can be said for soloist
	Levon Ambartsumian, who echoes and leads with integrity, sensitively alternating
	between the solo and accompanimental voices that Schnittke's writing demands.
	
	After such a volatile work, Sonata No. 2 (thoughtfully subtitled 'Sensa
	tempo') is something of a contrast. This was Schnittke's very first polystylistic
	experiment, and it contains a range of searing contrasts and unexpected
	(gimmicky?) dissonances - isolated moments that seem almost designed to shock
	and provoke the listener. An enforced struggle between harmony and disharmony
	ensues; this is Schnittke's metaphor for the conflict between the musical
	styles of the past and present respectively, and it is significant that the
	sonata never finds a conclusive centre in one tonality or another. Schnittke
	takes this concept further by introducing themes of Liszt (the B-A-C-H motif
	which Liszt adapted), and Beethoven (from Variations, Op.35) then tainting
	them with atonality, in order to '[rule] out the possibility of pure harmony
	in today's disjunct world'.
	
	It is unfair to judge a violinist on the harsh sonorities of Schnittke alone,
	but the virtuosic playing of violinist Levon Ambartsumian (b.1955) is
	outstanding. As a prodigy of the former Eastern Bloc, Ambartsumian's reputation
	is confined mainly to Eastern Europe, and although since 1988 he has toured
	in Europe and taken residence in the USA, he is largely unknown in the West.
	On this disc, his sound is often intense, suiting the harshness and dissonances
	of the writing, yet he also finds room for moments of tenderness. The virtuoso
	requirements of the sonata and A Paganini are faultlessly executed
	with apparent ease.
	
	A Paganini is a witty and mischievous piece with which to end the
	disc. A juxtaposition of harsh chords and snatches of melody from the 24
	Caprices of Paganini, it is a nightmarishly dissonant take on the great violin
	maestro's devilish composition, and an appropriately unnerving note on which
	to end.
	
	Simon Hewitt Jones
	
	
	See also review of Shostakovich CD, Phoenix PHCD 151, conducted by Levon
	Ambartsumian. SOON