BBC Music Magazine

BLOCH

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Suites for solo cello

DALLAPICCO­LA

Ciaccona, Intermezzo e Adagio

LIGETI

Sonata for solo cello Natalie Clein (cello)

Hyperion CDA 68155 64:29 mins

Ernest Bloch composed his three unaccompan­ied Cello Suites for the charismati­c performer Zara Nelsova during the late 1950s when he was living in retirement at Agate Beach in Oregon. In contrast to the exotic and consciousl­y Hebraic modes of expression he exploited in famous works such as Schelomo, these Suites are more ascetic and emotionall­y elusive. They draw inspiratio­n from Bach in their multi-movement structure, which presents a sequence of contrastin­g slow and declamator­y sections with faster and more rhythmical­ly charged material.

Although Natalie Clein plays these pieces with same degree of fervour and commitment as on her outstandin­g Hyperion recording of Bloch’s works for cello and orchestra, each of the Suites effectivel­y covers the same musical ground. There’s an obvious danger of monotony when the works are side by side, but Clein works hard to create as much variety as possible, delivering the more expansive Second Suite with particular ardour.

Clein also makes a powerful case for Dallapicco­la’s Ciaconna, Intermezzo e Adagio, an extended and often bleak work composed against the traumatic background of the destructio­n of Italy at the end of the Second World War, which utilises a much more radical harmonic language than Bloch. Undoubtedl­y the most approachab­le music in this fascinatin­g programme is Ligeti’s Sonata, already a firmly establishe­d favourite amongst cellists. Clein’s performanc­e is exemplary, bringing requisite warmth and tenderness to the opening ‘Dialogo’ and propelling the obsessive moto perpetuo semiquaver­s of the ‘Capriccio’ with tremendous energy and rhythmic drive. Erik Levi

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