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Suk, Martinu & Fiser: Works for Violin & Piano
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 01/08/2025

Suk, Martinu & Fiser: Works for Violin & Piano
- Artist: Daniel Matejca
- Label: Supraphon
- Genre: Classical Artists
- UPC: 099925436124
Product Notes
Suk, Martinu, and Fiser in the creative hands of young virtuosos
The Supraphon debut of 18-year-old Daniel Matejca (Ysaye - Violin Sonatas,
2023) has attracted great attention with critics around the world writing
about his remarkable talent, comparing his recording with the very best.
That same year, the 17-year-old pianist Jan Schulmeister came away from
Texas with third prize at the prestigious Cliburn Junior Competition. And also
that year, the Matejca - Schulmeister duo celebrated victory in the chamber
music category at the competition Concertino Praga; that opened them
the door to the studio for the making of this recording. Instead of brilliant,
virtuosic show pieces, the young artists chose challenging Czech repertoire
of the 20th century with pivotal works by Suk, Martinu, and Lubos Fiser.
Martinu composed his Czech Rhapsody in the USA just after the end of
the Second World War for Fritz Kreisler, who was 70 years old by then. Even
today, this beautiful composition is a great technical challenge for the soloist.
Martinu's First Violin Sonata (1929) still belongs to the composer's Paris period,
as can be seen from jazz elements and the sometimes impressionistic mood
of the piano part. The third composer, Lubos Fiser, is known mainly in his
homeland, but his music also earned international awards (UNESCO prize,
Prix d'Italia). His violin sonata The Hands was originally supposed to have been
titled Crux, but that was completely unacceptable during the period of harsh
communist rule. In the words of Ivan straus, who premiered the sonata,
"the composition could be interpreted as a loose depiction of the Stations
of the Cross at Easter with dramatic moments of whipping, hatred, and
anxiety followed by a funeral procession (pizzicato) and then the glorious
Resurrection in the concluding apotheosis to the sound of bells."