BBC Music Magazine

Brahms • R Schumann

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Brahms: Viola Sonatas Nos 1 & 2; Sonatensat­z (arr. Katims); R Schumann: Adagio & Allegro, Op. 70 Philip Dukes (viola), Peter Donohoe (piano) Chandos CHAN 20146 58:45 mins Brahms composed his two Op. 120 Sonatas for the clarinetti­st Richard Mühlfeld, and they’re most familiar in their original form. But Brahms also

made alternativ­e versions for violin and for viola, and viola players have taken the sonatas to their heart with good reason: the viola’s range is similar to that of the clarinet, and its instrument’s warm, husky tones are well suited to the music. Brahms added a few double stops in the viola part, and made some changes to the clarinet’s melodic line – notably in the trio section of the second sonata’s middle movement. Some 40 years earlier, Brahms composed a scherzo for violin and piano as his contributi­on to a composite ‘greetings’ sonata for Joseph Joachim. The viola adaptation by the American player Milton Katims works very well – perhaps better than the authentic viola version of Schumann’s Adagio and Allegro Op. 70, originally written for horn and piano. It’s a piece that’s more often taken up by cellists, in its other alternativ­e form.

Philip Dukes’s love of this music is everywhere apparent in his affectiona­te performanc­es, but the recording throws up problems: the piano is just a little too distantly placed, and yet Peter Donohoe’s strong personalit­y tends to overwhelm the music-making. Donohoe is a fine pianist, but perhaps not an instinctiv­e chamber player: there’s a certain lack of intimacy at times, particular­ly in such moments as the hushed penultimat­e variation in the second sonata of Brahms’s pair, or in the meltingly beautiful introducti­on to the Schumann piece.

Misha Donat

PERFORMANC­E ★★★

RECORDING ★★★

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