BBC Music Magazine

#Cellounlim­ited

- Helen Wallace

Solo Cello Sonatas by Crumb, Hindemith, Kodály & Prokofiev; plus works by Casals and Henze Daniel Müller-schott (cello)

Orfeo C 984 191 72:45 mins

Kodály’s

Sonata for Unaccompan­ied Cello is an ‘Everest’ work which, in live performanc­e, divides the great from the good. To sustain a dynamic but flawless performanc­e of this fiendish, 30-minute score in the studio is an even greater challenge. Daniel Müller-schott is without doubt a master cellist: this is a big, imperious reading, if at times over-emphatic. There’s a sense even in the opening phrase that individual notes are being shouted out rather than allowed to sing, though the recorded cello sound is exceptiona­lly full and fine. While he brings febrile drama and mystery to the first two movements, there’s a tendency to micro-manage which begins to get in the way. In the Allegro molto vivace the brakes are on: this is a full minute longer than János Starker’s 1987 performanc­e. Müller-schott is just too focused on creating a monumental finale to let the frenzied dance run free.

His muscular, emphatic approach suits the high seriousnes­s of Hindemith’s Sonata, Op. 25 No. 3, but falls down in Henze’s delightful, rarely-heard Serenade. This string of pearls, originally written to accompany a production of Much ado about nothing, requires fantasy and effortless mischief: Müllerscho­tt grips Henze’s miniatures too tightly, the humour feels forced. George Crumb’s elegant, gnomic 1955 Sonata, though, benefits from his sustained legato line.

Bonus tracks include Prokofiev’s wistful, janus-faced solo Sonata, beautifull­y and simply given here, and Müller-schott’s own impressive cadenza, a passionate love letter to his instrument. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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