In the spring of 2020, the Covid pandemic caused turmoil in the concert diaries of most musicians, including the conductor Andrew Litton and his wife Katharina Kang Litton, principal violist of New York City Ballet. To find an outlet for their musical expression they began to explore the repertoire for viola and piano together. Having played the sonatas by Brahms they came across the music by two other Viennese composers, Brahms’ near-contemporary Robert Fuchs and his student Egon Kornauth. Fuchs – who the less-than-effusive Brahms called ‘a splendid musician’ – had a long and distinguished career at the Vienna Conservatory where his other students included such composers as Mahler, Wolf, Sibelius, Zemlinsky and Korngold.

That the sonatas recorded here were composed around the same time as Schoenberg’s Second String Quartet can be hard to believe – as is the fact that Fuchs’s Phantasiestücke (composed in his 80th and final year) was contemporary with Bartók’s Piano Concerto No. 1. But if they are not in any way pioneering, all three works are beautifully achieved: formally both strong and flexible, with a subtle, deeply-felt emotional colouring of their own. The Litton Duo close the recital with a piece that has a personal significance for the two – an arrangement of the Korean folk song Arirang which they received as a wedding present from Stephen Hough.

“Enjoyable and stylishly played……both composers receive big-hearted advocacy from the Littons. Throughout,you sense that both players are - in the best possible way - capable of finishing each other’s phrases…an imaginative and engaging programme.”

— Gramophone UK

“Best known as conductor, Andrew Litton conjures from the keyboard some beautiful sonorities with which to cuddle the viola…With slender, beautifully focused sound, Katharina Kang Litton makes all her points through calm, determined understatement; her breathtaking, sustained pianissimos command as much attention as the few well-paced climaxes..”

— The Strad

“The Litton Duo made the most of what can only be described as a God-given opportunity in far from ideal circumstances. The result is more than capable of offering real musical solace to those who were affected by the pandemic in any way. Suffice it to say that the performances are simply stunning; they attest not only to the individual skills of the two performers, but to the obvious total empathy between them – clearly a musical marriage made in Heaven. If you love the viola, then this is compulsory listening. If , however, you are not yet convinced about the instrument’s capabilities, then this is a sure way to become an overnight fan. At times you really have to pinch yourself, lest you think you are listening to a cello in the lower notes or to a violin at the top. But at the same time Katharina Kang Litton produces an amazingly rich viola sound, on a modern instrument made in 2014 by Robert Clemens from St. Louis.”

-Musicweb-International

Kathy Kang Violine

Mara Mednik

Klavier

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756–1791)
Sonate für Violine und Klavier B-Dur KV 454

Eugène Ysaÿe (1858–1931)

Poème élégiaque op. 12
Sonate op. 27 Nr. 3 „Ballade“

Fritz Kreisler (1875–1962)
La Gitana
Caprice viennois op. 2

Nathan Milstein (1904–1992)
Paganiniana

Total: 62:37
CLCL 108 / 2008

Erscheinungstermin
26.11.2008