by Miruna Ghițescu
The “Stradivarius” Tour, which
was launched in 2008, is a true adventure each year, because violinist
Alexandru Tomescu puts forward some musical cycles that we don`t hear very
often on the local scenes. He played the 24 Caprices by Paganini, the Sonatas
for solo violin by Ysaÿe, the Sonatas and Partitas for solo
violin by Bach, and during the last two years, together with his friend
Eduard Kunz, he has offered to the public the Sonatas for violin and piano by
Prokofiev (2014) and by Enescu (2015).
A few months after playing these
pieces in the tour, Alexandru Tomescu recorded the Sonatas by Ysaÿe, but
he didn’t try to use any editing in order to preserve the lively tone of the
concert audition. Sound engineer Jakob Händel has given a helping hand, as
always, for obtaining some excellent results.
The Six Sonatas for solo violin by Ysaÿe, the most important cycle dedicated to the solo violin since Paganini`s caprices, were written in 1923, after the Belgian composer had listened to violinist Joseph Szigeti performing the Sonatas for solo violin by Bach and decided to compose some sort of a replica to the Bach`s cycle, one that combines the technical evolution of the violin performance with the musical elements of the beginning of the 20th century.

The sonatas were written for his
violinist friends Joseph Szigeti, Jacques Thibaud, George Enescu, Mathieu
Crickboom and Manuel Quiroga, and in each and every one there are clues
regarding the addressee: the sonata written for Spanish violinist Manuel
Quiroga has the style of a habanera, the one written for Fritz Kreisler has
some Viennese salon musical elements and so on.
In performing all these sonatas
that require an extraordinary virtuosity, Alexandru Tomescu is not interested
in revealing the spectacular side of the cycle, he doesn`t go with the flow of
speed, on the contrary he seems rather tempted to convey to the public the
architectonical equilibrium of the whole, the savant and subtle harmonies of
this post-romantic music.
The second sonata, maybe the most
spectacular one, which also provides the album’s title, is a hallucinating
journey into the past, where Bach`s presence can be identified at each step
thanks to the quotes picked up from his works (for example, the first notes of
the sonata are taken from the Partita in mi major). The four movements
of the sonata are telling a long ago story and have symbolical names – Obsession,
Melancholy, The Dance of Shades and The Angers –,
and the medieval theme Dies irae appears as a fantasy, as it was taken
out from a nightmare.
Likewise, we are looking forward to Alexandru Tomescu performing in the years to come some other complete works: from Beethoven`s sonatas to the ones of Béla Bartók.
