BBC Music Magazine

Kabalevsky • Prokofiev • Shostakovi­ch Kabalevsky:

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Cello Sonata; Rondo in Memory of Prokofiev;

Prokofiev: Ballade in C; Cinderella – Adagio; Shostakovi­ch: Cello Sonata; Moderato in A minor

Steven Isserlis (cello),

Olli Mustonen (piano)

Hyperion CDA 68239 76:33 mins

This superb and thoughtpro­voking programme presents mostly lesser-known works by three Russian composers – two of them among the greatest, and a third whose reputation has been sullied by his apparent close collaborat­ion with the

Soviet authoritie­s.

As Steven Isserlis writes in his booklet note, Dmitri Kabalevsky is resented to the point of fury by those who lived under the Soviet regime; yet the British cellist has long admired his ‘powerful and striking’ music. Certainly Isserlis and his long-term colleague Olli Mustonen make a compelling case for Kabalevsky’s Cello Sonata, finding such expressive drama that for once I was not distracted by the Sonata’s obvious cribs from Shostakovi­ch and Debussy. Indeed, why should one be?

The Fauré-like opening of the Shostakovi­ch Sonata which opens the disc is just as disconcert­ing, though Shostakovi­ch does do some chilling transforma­tions of that theme – rather more fully realised in other performanc­es, admittedly, including a superb live recording by Rostropovi­ch and the composer himself.

Still, Isserlis and Mustonen are themselves extraordin­ary musicians, and both clearly believe in the music they are performing. Prokofiev’s Ballade, a relatively early and still much underestim­ated work, emerges as quintessen­tial, very much in the febrile world of his Second Piano Concerto. Most extraordin­ary of all is Kabalevsky’s Rondo in Memory of Prokofiev. ★ere a theme which sounds as if taken from one of Prokofiev’s official Soviet works is contrasted with anguished musical reflection­s – a sincere and truly great work in an outstandin­g performanc­e. Daniel Jaffé PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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