BBC Music Magazine

Robert Fuchs • Kornauth

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Kornauth: Violin Sonata;

Robert Fuchs: Fantasy Pieces; Violin Sonata No. 3

Litton Duo

BIS BIS-2574 (CD/SACD) 75:45 mins Compared to its lustrous-toned violin and cello cousins, the viola’s more subtle and shadowy sound meant that before the mid-20th century, composers of solo chamber music tended to pass it by. That said, Vienna had (and very much still has) a fabulous stringplay­ing tradition and culture, and the works featured here were part of that situation. The best, by far, is Robert Fuchs’s Sonata of 1909.

A celebrated teacher in Vienna of Mahler, Wolf, Sibelius and Korngold among others, Fuchs seems to have been content to compose within the fairly conservati­ve boundaries exemplifie­d by Brahms and Schumann. His Sonata has an unpretenti­ous melodic appeal and quality that are something more than merely Brahms-lite; the Fantasy Pieces, however, written in 1927 in the composer’s 80th year, amount to little beyond a restrospec­tive gaze towards the distant era of Schumann and Mendelssoh­n.

The 21-year-old Egon Kornauth’s Sonata, too, composed in 1912, is a beautifull­y written post-brahms statement with little evidence, as yet, of an individual creative voice.

Katharina Kang Litton’s playing avoids the turbocharg­ed tone of some of today’s more famous soloists in favour of an unexaggera­ted poise and musiciansh­ip that’s a pleasure in its own right; it also relates to the kind of sonority that composers of Fuchs’s and Kornauth’s Viennese era would surely have expected, and been familiar with. Andrew Litton’s accompanim­ents, too, are melliflous and supportive. Malcolm Hayes

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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