BBC Music Magazine

Myaskovsky • Nechaev • Shebalin

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Violin Sonatas Sasha Rozhdestve­nsky (violin), Viktoria Postnikova (piano) First Hand Records FHR 057 62:27 mins Myaskovsky is by far the bestknown of these three Soviet-era composers, yet this is the first commercial recording of his Violin Sonata. Completed in 1947, its fin de siècle French salon style may have been intended not to offend Stalinist aesthetics; yet the long, rambling phrases – not so much long-limbed as straining effortfull­y to reach the terra firma of cadences – suggest not all is well beneath the work’s smiling demeanour. Violinist Sasha Rozhdestve­nsky (son of the late conductor), rather close-miked as if in a 1950s recording, plays fluently though not, perhaps, drawing the music’s last ounce of expressive meaning. His mother Viktoria Postnikova provides idiomatic accompanim­ent in this and the accompanyi­ng two works.

Shebalin’s attractive if not distinctiv­e Violin Sonata, composed in 1958 (five years after Stalin’s

death), is initially rather bland – certainly not suggesting a composer posthumous­ly celebrated for introducin­g his students to the latest avant-garde creations from the West (including music by Boulez); the work becomes more engaging with a Borodin-style 5/4 Scherzo, and a third movement which touches a depth of melancholy Myaskovsky dared not risk under Stalin. It finishes with a crowd-pleasing finale of virtuosic brio.

After so much emotional circumspec­tion, it’s almost a relief to hear the forthright histrionic­s of the 1928 Sonata by Vasily Nachaev. Played here with great relish, one may hear Prokofiev’s influence, particular­ly in the ‘diabolical’ style of the finale, though that movement’s false endings rather highlight the fact it outstays its welcome. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★

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