AmberwoodCD

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Karen Bentley Pollick, violin and viola
Ivan Sokolov, piano
 
I first met the pianist Ivan Sokolov in Seattle during the Seattle Chamber Players 2004 Icebreaker II: Baltic Voices Festival. After three days of intensive concerts and symposia, we met at the home of Elena Dubinets, the renowned Russian musicologist, to read through the Shostakovich Viola Sonata, a remarkable work that is inspired in mood and motif by Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata. After we finished, Ivan exclaimed that he would like to compose his own Solnechnaya (Sunlight) Sonata for Violin and Piano. We premiered Ivan’s new composition on the Washington Composers Forum’s TransMagiNations program in 2005.Our inspiration to record both violin and viola sonatas of Sokolov came during our rehearsals in Seattle in February 2007. Both works share similar opening motifs and complement each other beautifully. We chose to record on a 2006 F212 grand piano by Paolo Fazioli, whose special resonance and cantabile characteristics allow the aural qualities of the violin and piano to meld. The result is an unusual combination of instruments, repertoire and soundscape.amberwood also includes the charming Tango Orientale for Viola and Piano by the Swedish composer Ole Saxe. I have performed this piece on numerous occasions with cello or piano as well as alongside a tango band. To complete the recording, we commissioned and premiered in March 2007, Jan Vičar’s Uspávanky /Lullabies. In the current recording we placed Uspávanky in front of Sokolov’s Solnechnaya Sonata to create a cycle from sunset to sunrise.

Shoal Creek, the setting for our recording session, is nestled amongst Southern woods of pine, dogwood and cherry. At sunset the woods take on an amber glow, and the light permeates as a kaleidoscope of shadows and accents that mirror the bass resonance of the piano, the mellow hues of the viola, and the bright timbres of the violin. And in this interaction of light and sound, wood and ivory we found the inspiration for our musical offering —amberwood.

–Karen Bentley Pollick

 

Sonata for Viola and Piano

Sonata for Viola and Piano (2006), along with the 2002 cello and 2005 violin sonatas, form a triad of works, united by a similar opening motif. The viola sonata can be seen as an interlude between the violin and cello sonatas – the midway point between the two other members of a string trio. This one-movement sonata is comprised of four sections resembling the construction of a sonata or symphony cycle. The agitated opening Allegrois followed by a nocturne; the impetuous finale is preceded by a short scherzo link. Each section concludes with a funereal iteration of the beginning theme before its transcendental transformation. Perhaps it is possible to find some light irony or melancholic smile in the concept. Or perhaps it’s absolutely serious music. I don’t know…

The Sonata is dedicated to the violist Carol Allen – a friend of many years.

Solnechnaya Sonata

Solnechnaya Sonata for Violin and Piano was written in August 2005. The first movement, a sonata form, Allegro moderato in E minor, is filled with a lyric-epic atmosphere and impressions from the beauty of Russian nature. While working on it, I was listening to Russian music and especially Alexander Glazunov’s Karelian Legend (op. 99, 1916). The second movement Andante is in a pastoral, contemplative mood – with a kinship to the symphonic music by Vassily Kalinnikov, suggestive of memories of respite in the open air. In the middle section there appears an image of a wide river, smoothly bearing its waters. In the recapitulation, you can hear a bird singing.

This birdsong comes closer to us in the third movement, Scherzo, and we look at it as if through an “ear microscope”. The finale, Allegro vivace, and the dramaturgical center of the sonata, is cast in a rondo form. It has only one theme, but some images from the previous movements are reflected and reach their conclusions in this finale. After a lyrical development, the music gradually becomes brighter and ends with a coda in E Major, which is reminiscent of a burst of sunlight. The entire piece is named for this coda – the Solnechnaya (Sunlight) Sonata. I am grateful to the wonderful violinist Karen Bentley Pollick for her request to write this music and for agreeing to perform it.

–Ivan Sokolov

Ivan Sokolov graduated as pianist and composer from the Moscow State Tchaikovsky Conservatory. An extraordinary and inspired performer of baroque, classical and romantic music, Mr. Sokolov is one of the major Russian artists committed to the contemporary music world. Since 1979, Mr. Sokolov has performed as a soloist throughout the former Soviet Union and Europe.

Mr. Sokolov’s own works include pieces for piano, violin, piano trio, orchestra, as well as a mini-opera. In his music, Sokolov experiments with different types of musical expression, including cryptophonic encodings, graphic notational experiments and truly romantic styles.www.obst-music.com/artists/sokolov.htm

 

Tango Orientale for Viola and Piano

Tango Orientale for Viola and Piano (2001) was originally written for clarinet and piano. In this work, the multicultural influences of the tango tradition seek out their roots from the Orient. The Andalusian scale is reminiscent of the Moorian occupation of Spain that left Andalusia with a rich inheritance of music and art. Ages later, this musical influence would inspire Latin American music. When the clarinet version of Tango Orientaletoured South America with Kjell Fagéus and his sextet, it found its way to Argentina, the homeland of tango.

–Ole Saxe

Ole Saxe was born in April 1952 in Copenhagen, and has lived in Sweden since 1973. As a composer he has recorded three albums of relaxation music, as well as four musicals. In 2000, Saxe composed Dance Suite, a contemporary collection of dances for solo violin. This work was later arranged for violin and symphony orchestra, and premiered with Redwood Symphony Orchestra and Karen Bentley in 2002.

Uspávanky /Lullabies

Uspávanky / Lullabies for Violin and Piano (2006) is a lyrical parallel to Homage to Fiddlers for Violin and Cello, and is similarly based on the folk music of my native country. The composition is generated from Moravian lullabies. I have expanded the augmented fourth, the governing feature of the Lydian mode, and constructed a bi-tonal work: a mother sings and rocks her baby (simple tune in piano in A-flat Major), but the child’s dreaming comes from somewhere else (violin in D Major).

–Jan Vičar

From the Czech Republic, Jan Vičar is a prolific composer whose works have been performed and recorded by leading soloists, orchestras and choirs in the Czech Republic, United States, Canada and Japan. He has served as Editor-In-Chief of the leading Czech music journalHudební rozhledy.

Vičar has published five books including Imprints: Essays on Czech Music and Aesthetics. He is a professor of music at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague, and head of the Musicology Department of Palacky University in Olomouc. As a Fulbright/CIES Scholar-in-residence, he lectured at eight United States universities in 1998 and 1999.

 

amberwood was recorded at Shoal Creek, Alabama on March 4, 2007.
Jean-Baptiste Vuillaume Violin 1860
William Whedbee Viola 1987
Paolo Fazioli F212 Grand Piano 2006
Produced by Karen Bentley Pollick
Engineered and Mastered by Brian Moon
Graphic Design by FitzMartin
Cover photo courtesy of Sylvia Michiels Photography 2007
Photo of Karen Bentley Pollick & Ivan Sokolov courtesy of Matthew Felton 2006
Copyright © Ariel Ventures, 2007

Reviews

 

From Journal of the American Viola Society
Vol. 24, No. 1 Spring 2008Reviewer: Carlos Maria SolareIvan Sokolov, a Moscow-born and trained pianist-composer, has over the past five years written a triptych of piano-accompanied sonatas for string instruments. This CD includes the violin and viola ones, respectively from 2005 and 2006. Interestingly, all three works are based on a similar melodic cell, with which the first movement begins. Another unifying factor, featuring in several movements, seems to be a kind of stylized bird-song. The viola sonata, in a sonorous C minor, is in one multi-sectional but continuous movement of twelve minutes’ duration. The violin sonata is classically divided into four movements and is twice as long. Written in E minor, a blazing coda in the major mode prompted the composer to call it “Sunlight” Sonata. Both works show Sokolov’s credentials as a latter-day Rachmaninov, relishing succulent piano textures, while treating the respective string instrument idiomatically. Sokolov’s partnership with Karen Bentley Pollick is closely-knit, and she — a violinist — seems to feel quite at home on the larger instrument as well. (Indeed, the dark tone of her Vuillaume violin seems to suggest an affinity!) The CD is completed by an appropriately exotic-sounding Tango Orientale for viola and piano by Ole Saxe, and Lullabies by Moravian composer, Jan Vicar. The latter keeps the violin and the piano in different keys (A flat and D respectively), which together with a stylized use of the Lydian mode, evokes elements of Moravian folkloric music. The whole CD, which is very attractively recorded and presented, demonstrates that it is quite possible to write good tunes in the 21st Century.
From Strings Magazine
December 2007

On Record
Reviewer: Greg Cahill

Tired of the same old warhorses rehashed year after year? Amberwood is a richly satisfying collection that offers an invigorating foursome of contemporary works that show just how original a string player can get when committed to bringing great new music to the world.

The gifted violinist and violist Karen Bentley Pollick commissioned the Sonata for Viola and Piano last year from pianist and composer Ivan Sokolov (b. 1960), a prominent Russian player and educator.

The result is a 12 ½ minute recording of a wonderfully hypnotic music that makes good use of the viola’s dark voice, especially in the nocturne. The piece is part of a triad of works-the others are a 2002 cello and a 2005 violin sonata- that share a similar opening motif.

This new Viola Sonata is fashioned in four movements, like a symphony cycle.

The other works included here are the spry Tango Orientale for Viola and Piano (2001) by Swedish composer Ole Saxe (b. 1952); the meditativeUspávanky (Lullabies) for Violin and Piano (2006) by Czech composer Jan Vičar (what the composer describes as “a lyrical parallel to theHomage to Fiddlers for Violin and Cello,” which he penned during his tenure at Birmingham-Southern College); and the wistful Solnechnaya (Sunlight) Sonata for Violin and Piano (2005) by Sokolov.

Pollick, who has performed with everyone from the Dave Matthews Band to the New York Philharmonic, resides in Birmingham, Alabama. At press time, she had planned to present the first all-Sokolov concert in Birmingham and Baton Rouge, joining forces with Louisiana State University cello professor Dennis Parker to perform Sokolov’s early Piano Trio, followed by a cycle of his violin, viola, and cello sonatas.