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Label Challenge Classics |
UPC 0608917296426 |
Catalogue number CC 72964 |
Release date 04 August 2023 |
"Let's forget about the polished and aestheticizing Brahms or the star-like virtuosity of many famous performers: Leertouwer and Reynolds, (...) go in search of historical authenticity through the recovery of portamentos, the rejection of a continuous vibrato, the desire to do not make the sound homogeneous, enhancing the inequalities and contrasts of color and mood. Are the violin's high notes less rounded than usual? Is the piano sound sometimes harsh? I like it like this, if that means leaving the comfort of an interpretation of standardized beauty."
Amadeus, 01-5-2024Let's forget about the polished and aestheticizing Brahms or the star-like virtuosity of many famous performers: Leertouwer and Reynolds, (...) go in search of historical authenticity through the recovery of portamentos, the rejection of a continuous vibrato, the desire to do not make the sound homogeneous, enhancing the inequalities and contrasts of color and mood. Are the violin's high notes less rounded than usual? Is the piano sound sometimes harsh? I like it like this, if that means leaving the comfort of an interpretation of standardized beauty.
Amadeus, 01-5-2024
The reading of the three Sonatas (...) offered to us in this album by the pianist Julian Reynolds and the violinist Johannes Leertouwer (...) is convincing in every respect: interpretative, stylistic, expressive. With measured dynamic balance and tonal clarity.
Classic Voice, 01-3-2024
..the close duo Leertouwer-Reynolds takes matters very different from their direct competitors.
The Blüthner grand piano from 1857 sounds sonorous and Reynolds can handle it very well.
De Gelderlander, 28-2-2024
The efforts of Leertouwer and his accomplice Julius Reynolds focus less on the beauty and flavor of timbres than on a radical reconsideration of the use of legato, portamento, vibrato (often absent or extremely economical) and - more decisive - rubato. When we know the cordial detestation that Brahms had of the metronome and rigid tempos, we can only applaud this flexibility, this audacity in the changes of pace.
Diapason, 01-2-2024
I will simply say, the performances are lovely and most engaging. They have now become my preferred versions to sit back and enjoy hearing.
And the wonderful sound quality delivered by Bert van der Wolf in this recording certainly takes these performances to another exalted level. For those of us who value excellence in sound reproduction, the sound quality is enough to make this a preferred album in our music libraries. When combined with the excellence of the performances, this album is a clear winner all around.
Positive Feedback, 28-1-2024
Reynolds get top billing - these are sonatas for piano and violin, after all - and he phrases throughout with great sensitivity.
In his recording with Julius Katchen (Decca, 1/68), Suk uses portamento with such discretion that you hardly notice it. I find that preferable; but Reynolds and Leertouwer, beautifully recorded, are well worth hearing.
Gramophone, 01-10-2023
The biggest differences with modern, inauthentic renditions are in the details, partly thanks to the sound of the grand piano used from 1857. Some details sound more transparent and the balance between the instruments is more equal in several places.
Luister, 01-9-2023
And that is also the beauty of and the fascinating thing about the violin sonatas as performed by Leertouwer and Reynolds: you can immediately taste that not every note has been carefully weighed and varnished in advance. Inspiration can flow freely. The tone of the musical conversation is not fixed, but develops here and now. It makes listening an adventure, in the best sense of the word.
NRC, 18-8-2023
...true to his research, Leertouwer plays the Sonatas differently, giving them an unexpected, lovingly slant. In his reading, applying abundant portamento, I got a feeling as though I was listening to musical love letters.
I recommend that those interested listen for themselves. If I’m totally off the mark, you may well appreciate the way Leertouwer and his duo partner, Julian Reynolds, at the 1857 Blüthner grand piano perform so professionally and enthusiastically their fashion of these Sonatas whilst, maybe, conveying at the same time a glimpse of Brahms’s mindset. It does not replace any of my favourites. Still, I value it highly for what it is: An incomparable and well-researched view into the origin of these war horses of our classical repertoire.
HRAudio, 24-7-2023