The two sonatas for violin and piano of Sergey Prokofiev could hardly be more contrasting, though their dates of composition overlapped. The first sonata, in F minor, was written between 1938 and 1946 and is a brutal, almost savage work at times filled with angst and tumult. The maudlin first movement was performed at the composer's funeral in 1953. By contrast, the second sonata, composed originally for flute and piano in 1943 and transposed for violin at the behest of David Oistrakh in 1944, is much more classically ...
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The two sonatas for violin and piano of Sergey Prokofiev could hardly be more contrasting, though their dates of composition overlapped. The first sonata, in F minor, was written between 1938 and 1946 and is a brutal, almost savage work at times filled with angst and tumult. The maudlin first movement was performed at the composer's funeral in 1953. By contrast, the second sonata, composed originally for flute and piano in 1943 and transposed for violin at the behest of David Oistrakh in 1944, is much more classically minded, melodious, and agreeable. The only other works Prokofiev was to write for violin and piano came again in the form of a transcription, this time as a set of Five Songs Without Words composed for soprano and piano in 1923. Performing on this Dynamic album is violinist Pavel Berman and pianist Vardan Mamikonian. For much of the two sonatas, Berman's sound and approach to his instrument is ideally suited to Prokofiev's aggressive, energized writing. The brutality of the First Sonata's...
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Add this copy of Prokofiev: Complete Works for Violin & Piano to cart. $13.76, Sold by New England Booksellers rated 3.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Greenfield, MA, UNITED STATES, published 2010 by Dynamic.