Johann Sebastian Bach; Johannes Brahms; Sigfrid Karg-elert; Franz Liszt; Felix Mendelssohn; Max Reger; Robert Schumann Julkaisija: Chandos (2022) CD-levy
Johann Sebastian Bach; Johannes Brahms; Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; Robert Schumann; Bedrich Smetana; Richard Strauss; Igor Stravin Julkaisija: SOMM Recordings (2021) CD-levy
Silke Hilpert; Anne Robert; Anja Schümann; Franz Specht; Barbara Gottstein-Schramm; Susanne Kalender; Isabe Krämer-Kienle Hueber Verlag GmbH (2017) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Silke Hilpert; Anne Robert; Anja Schümann; Franz Specht; Barbara Gottstein-Schramm; Susanne Kalender; Isabe Krämer-Kienle Hueber Verlag GmbH (2017) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Silke Hilpert; Anne Robert; Anja Schümann; Franz Specht; Barbara Gottstein-Schramm; Susanne Kalender; Isabe Krämer-Kienle Hueber Verlag GmbH (2010) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Silke Hilpert; Anne Robert; Anja Schümann; Franz Specht; Barbara Gottstein-Schramm; Susanne Kalender; Isabe Krämer-Kienle Max Hueber Verlag (2007) Moniviestin
Christian Poltéra (cello), Ronald Brautigam (piano)
Brahms: Cello Sonata No. 1 In E Minor, Op. 38
Schumann: Stücke im Volkston (5), Op. 102
Brahms: Cello Sonata No. 2 in F major, Op. 99
Six years after their acclaimed disc devoted to Mendelssohn’s works for cello and piano, Christian Poltéra and Ronald Brautigam now tackle the two cello sonatas by Johannes Brahms, two central works in the repertoire, unquestionably the most important since those by Beethoven. The First Cello Sonata was composed between 1862 and 1865 when Brahms was in his thirties. He seemed intent on showcasing the lyricism of an instrument that is often compared to the human voice. Composed 24 years later, the Second Cello Sonata makes greater use of the cello’s range, particularly in the upper register. A common feature of these two sonatas is that the role of the piano is never secondary (Brahms was an excellent pianist) and the dialogue between the two instruments is both inexhaustible and complex. he programme also includes the Fünf Stücke im Volkston (Five Pieces in Folk Style) by Robert Schumann, Brahms’s early mentor. Composed in Schumann’s late years, this short cycle reflects the composer’s taste for small, expressive pieces in, as the title suggests, a popular and accessible idiom. These miniatures draw their charm not only from the cello’s marvellous nuances but also from the ‘folk style’.
"The duo fill their phrasing, rhythm and sense of momentum with bracing fresh air, bringing maximum exhilaration to a work that too often can seem to lack it. Poltéra’s tone leaps and glows – yes, cellos really can sparkle; and Brautigam’s, enhanced by a modern copy of an 1868 Streicher piano, has both a pinpoint clarity and extra resonance." - BBC Music Magazine, March 2024