BBC Music Magazine

Fazil Say

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Violin Sonatas Nos 1 & 2; Cleopatra; Violin Concerto ‘1001 Nights in the Harem’* Friedemann Eichhorn (violin),

Fazil Say (piano); *German Radio Philharmon­ic Saarbrücke­n and Kaiserslau­tern/christoph Eschenbach

Naxos 8.574085 69:40 mins Anatolian-born Fazil Say is most familiar as a pianist who combines technical prowess with an exuberantl­y showy performing style. His music is correspond­ingly extrovert, blending western Romanticis­m and eastern-inspired rhythms and harmonies with a jazzy tunefulnes­s in heart-on-sleeve lyrical appeal.

As this complete album of violin works attests, the results comprise on the one hand an exciting interweavi­ng of cultures but, on the other, a raid on the store cupboard of musical clichés. Both extremes co-exist in these four works, which are in effect a throwback to and inverting of 19th-century orientalis­m. There’s no doubting the brilliance and commitment of the performers – who include

Say himself in the two violin sonatas, respective­ly dated 1997 and 2019. The soloist throughout is Friedemann Eichhorn, whose violin alternatel­y dances, skitters, pleads and beguiles with astonishin­g ease.

While youthful enthusiasm marks the earlier piece, it’s rage and loss that elevates above all others in the more recent work, subtitled ‘Mount Ida’ for the Turkish peak and written in protest at environmen­tal destructio­n nearby. Cast in three movements, most affecting is the middle ‘Wounded Bird’ in which delicate whorls of sound stand in stark contrast to angry, Bartókian percussive­ness in the outer two.

The virtuosic competitio­n piece Cleopatra (2010) and the Violin Concerto 1001 Nights in the Harem (2007) offer depictions of women that are vivid but have uncomforta­ble undertones postmetoo. For the latter, Eichhorn is ably joined by the Deutsche Radio Philharmon­ie and conductor Christoph Eschenbach.

Steph Power

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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