account
basket
Challenge Records Int. logo
Friedrich Cerha - Chamber Music
Friedrich Cerha

Boulanger Trio

Friedrich Cerha - Chamber Music

Price: € 19.95 13.97
Format: CD
Label: CAvi
UPC: 4260085533473
Catnr: AVI 8553347
Release date: 25 March 2016
old €19.95 new € 13.97
Buy
1 CD
✓ in stock
19.95 13.97
old €19.95 new € 13.97
Buy
 
Label
CAvi
UPC
4260085533473
Catalogue number
AVI 8553347
Release date
25 March 2016
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN

About the album

FRIEDRICH CERHA - 90
Friedrich Cerha’s output has solid roots in an extended musical tradition, while spanning a wide arc from the beginnings of new music all the way to the present. This is not only due to the composer’s respectable age, but primarily to the great number of activities he has pursued in the course of his long life, along with the great variety of influences he has incorporated into his work. At the Darmstadt International Summer Courses for New Music in 1956, he attended seminars given by violinist Rudolf Kolisch and pianist Eduard Steuermann, who had prepared performances of works by Schoenberg, Berg and Webern in collaboration with the composers themselves. Cerha passed on this firsthand knowledge to the next generations in his numerous articles, in his post as Professor for Composition, Notation and Interpretation of New Music at the Musikakademie (which became the Vienna Conservatory of Music), in his performances as a violinist, and last not least as a conductor of ensembles, orchestras and operas, much in demand on the international new music scene.
Cerha then opened up his music to influences from other continents, such as polyrhythm and microtonality. In maqam (1989), the first of four string quartets, he used Arabian scales with quarter-tones and corresponding complex rhythms. Starting with Catalogue des objets trouvés (1969) and fully with the composition of the Brecht-based opera Baal (1974–80), Cerha’s style started featuring direct links with traditional expression, melodiousness, harmony and structures ranging from the Baroque Age to the early 20th century. His most recent duo and trio pieces pay homage to Bach, Berg, Schoenberg and to his own previous works, including a series of direct quotes. Rooted in tradition yet entirely at home in the present, Friedrich Cerha’s music certainly builds new kinds of bridges. Yet these are no flimsy constructions dangerously suspended over a yawning chasm; instead, his pieces are like sturdy viaducts with several arches firmly planted in different varieties of soil.

Artist(s)

Boulanger Trio

The German newspaper Die Welt described a performance of the Boulanger Trio as irresistible, while Wolfgang Rihm wrote in a letter: To be interpreted in this way is surely the great dream of every composer. Founded in Hamburg in 2006 by Karla Haltenwanger (piano), Birgit Erz (violin) and Ilona Kindt (cello), the ensemble is now one of the few full-time piano trios currently based in Berlin. Already in 2007 they won the 4th Trondheim International Chamber Music Competition in Norway, followed by the Rauhe Prize for New Chamber Music in 2008. The ensemble has received crucial musical guidance from Hatto Beyerle, Menahem Pressler, and Alfred Brendel. In the past years, the trio has gained an excellent reputation in the world of...
more

The German newspaper Die Welt described a performance of the Boulanger Trio as irresistible, while Wolfgang Rihm wrote in a letter: To be interpreted in this way is surely the great dream of every composer. Founded in Hamburg in 2006 by Karla Haltenwanger (piano), Birgit Erz (violin) and Ilona Kindt (cello), the ensemble is now one of the few full-time piano trios currently based in Berlin. Already in 2007 they won the 4th Trondheim International Chamber Music Competition in Norway, followed by the Rauhe Prize for New Chamber Music in 2008. The ensemble has received crucial musical guidance from Hatto Beyerle, Menahem Pressler, and Alfred Brendel.

In the past years, the trio has gained an excellent reputation in the world of chamber music, with regular appearances at the Heidelberger Frühling, Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, the Sommerliche Musiktage Hitzacker, the Dialogs at Salzburg Mozarteum, and Ultraschall in Berlin. In tandem with chamber music partners such as Nils Mönkemeyer (viola), Sebastian Manz (clarinet) and Andrè Schuen (baritone), the trio has performed at prestigious venues such as the Festspielhaus in Baden-Baden, Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, Wigmore Hall in London and the Philharmonie and the Konzerthaus in Berlin.

In addition to works of the Classical and Romantic periods, the three musicians are much in demand as performers of new music. The Boulanger Trio collaborates with composers such as Wolfgang Rihm, Johannes Maria Staud, Friedrich Cerha, Toshio Hosokawa, and Matthias Pintscher. In 2012, the trio launched its own concert series, the Boulangerie, in Hamburg and Berlin, and starting with this season it is also being exported to the Musikverein in Vienna. At every one of these concerts, a classical composition is performed alongside a piece of contemporary music, the composer of which is always present and talks with the three musicians about his or her oeuvre.

In 2016, the Boulanger Trio added two new recordings on the CAvi-music label to its discography: Solitaires, and a portrait CD celebrating the 90th birthday of Austrian composer Friedrich Cerha, after five previous releases on the Ars and Hänssler Profil labels that featured works by composers such as Shostakovich, Vasks, Liszt, and Schoenberg.


less

Composer(s)

Press

Play album Play album
01.
Fünf Sätze für Klaviertrio / Five Movements for Piano Trio (2006/2007): Parabola
02:50
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
02.
Fünf Sätze für Klaviertrio / Five Movements for Piano Trio (2006/2007): Malinconia enigmatica
03:58
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
03.
Fünf Sätze für Klaviertrio / Five Movements for Piano Trio (2006/2007): Scherzo Spettrale
03:46
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
04.
Fünf Sätze für Klaviertrio / Five Movements for Piano Trio (2006/2007): Elegie
05:26
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
05.
Fünf Sätze für Klaviertrio / Five Movements for Piano Trio (2006/2007): Stretta
03:04
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
06.
Rhapsodie für Violine und Klavier / Rhapsody for Violin and Piano (2001)
08:26
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
07.
Drei Stücke für Cello und Klavier / Three Pieces for Cello and Piano (2013) (World Première Recording): I (Viertel/Chrotchet = 50-52)
03:06
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
08.
Drei Stücke für Cello und Klavier / Three Pieces for Cello and Piano (2013) (World Première Recording): II (akkurat /exact, penibel / fastigious)
02:42
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
09.
Drei Stücke für Cello und Klavier / Three Pieces for Cello and Piano (2013) (World Première Recording): III (gehetzt / rushed; überstürtzt / hurried)
02:00
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
10.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): I Getragen
04:10
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
11.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): II Energico, ma pocco leggero, non troppo marcato
01:14
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
12.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): III Zart
02:27
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
13.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): IV Gespenstisch huschend
03:43
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
14.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): V (Viertel/Chrotchet = 44)
05:15
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
15.
Sechs Inventionen für Violine und Violoncello / Six Inventions for Violin and Cello (2005/2006): VI (Viertel/Crotchet = 144)
01:49
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
16.
Nachtstück / Nocturne, aus/from: Trio für Violine, Violoncello und Klavier / Violin, Cello and Piano (2005)
05:01
(Friedrich Cerha) Boulanger Trio
show all tracks

You might also like..

Dmitri Shostakovich, Franz Schubert
Viola & Piano
Andreas Willwohl & Daniel Heide
Ernst Křenek, Hans Gál, Krzysztof Penderecki
Serenade for Clarinet & Strings
Kilian Herold | Barbara Buntrock | Florian Donderer | Tanja Tetzlaff
Ludwig van Beethoven
Beethoven, Violin Sonatas Nos 1, 5, 6 & 10
Antje Weithaas | Dénes Várjon
John Cage
John Cage, Music for Three
Premysl Vojta | Florence Millet | Ye Wu
Ludwig van Beethoven
Beethoven, Violin Sonatas Nos 3, 7 & 8
Antje Weithaas | Dénes Várjon
Mélanie Bonis
Mel Bonis, Entre Soir et Matin
Sandrine Cantoreggi & Sheila Arnold
Johanna Senfter, Max Reger
Max Reger & Johanna Senfter, Clarinet Quintets
Kilian Herold & Armida Quartett
Ernst Křenek, Johannes Brahms
Brahms & Krenek, Piano Trios
Feininger Trio
Frank Martin, César Franck
Franck & Martin, Piano Quintets
Martin Klett & Armida Quartett
Maurice Ravel
Maurice Ravel, In Search of Lost Dance
Linos Piano Trio
Ludwig van Beethoven
Beethoven, Violin Sonatas Nos 2, 4 & 9 Kreutzer
Antje Weithaas | Dénes Várjon
Various composers
Modern Horn Trios
Premysl Vojta | Ye Wu | Florence Millet