Daniel Müller-Schott – #CelloUnlimited (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Daniel Müller-Schott – #CelloUnlimited (2019) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

After J. S. Bach’s solo cello suites in the early 18th century, the genre experienced a fallow period until Zoltán Kodály set the pace with a monumental sonata for solo cello in 1915. It inspired a variety of similar works, but Kodaly’s 30-minute sonata still stands ‘like Mount Everest’, to quote Daniel Müller-Schott, the soloist on this recording. His programme also includes music by Prokofiev, Hindemith, Henze, Crumb and Casals, and features a work of his own for the first time: Cadenza continues the tradition of compositions that other cellists have always added to their recital programmes. “Here, you can recognise influences of the solo works that have influenced me over the years. In Cadenza, the contrasting elements of the world of my instrument appear in the closest space – the cello in pure lyricism, just as sequences catapulting themselves into the highest registers in rhythmical savagery and immediately concluding the movement after a final culmination.” (Daniel Müller-Schott)

Daniel Müller-Schott, Francesco Piemontesi – Brahms: Sonatas Opp. 38, 78 & 99 (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Daniel Müller-Schott, Francesco Piemontesi – Brahms: Sonatas Opp. 38, 78 & 99 (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

“The two cello sonatas by Johannes Brahms are in very stark contrast to each other. This is not solely due to the more than twenty years separating the works. Brahms had a preference for pairs of works with the same instrumentation, which he frequently composed according to the principle of contrast. In the case of the cello concertos, it is above all the character and mood of the respective pieces that describe the contrasts. In the version for cello, the Violin Sonata op. 78, one of Brahms’ finest chamber works, supplements the two original cello sonatas in a charming way.

Daniel Müller-Schott – Trip to Russia (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Daniel Müller-Schott – Trip to Russia (2018) [FLAC 24 bit, 48 kHz]

Rare Russian cello repertoire: From the Old World: Perhaps the relatively small size of a repertoire is an advantage after all. The vast realm occupied by the leading genres – as in Verdi’s operatic oeuvre, Bach’s cantatas, Schubert’s Lieder or Haydn’s symphonies – seems so extensive as to make one despair of embracing it in its entirety.

Daniel Müller-Schott, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Alexandre Bloch – Four Visions of France (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Daniel Müller-Schott, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, Alexandre Bloch – Four Visions of France (2021) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

It is not by chance that luminous textures and sensual orchestral colors are considered essential features of French music. Its history features great names renowned for their art of instrumentation and sensitive use of timbres, who include the composers of the cello concertos on this recording: Camille Saint-Sa”ens, whose instrumentation technique always combines color with transparency, ‘Edouard Lalo, who was highly esteemed by Claude Debussy for the wealth of color in his works, and Arthur Honegger, who painted striking soundscapes not only in his Cello Concerto but in his works without a large orchestra as well. Often it is the fine shadings and delicate transitions that characterize the tone colors of French music and are responsible for its delightful charm. Daniel M”uller-Schott – Opus Klassik award winner 2019 – appealingly combines five works from the French sound kaleidoscope on his newest album with the DSO Berlin and Alexandre Bloch ‘Four Visions of France’.

Daniel Müller-Schott, Herbert Schuch – Edvard Grieg: Cello Works (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Daniel Müller-Schott, Herbert Schuch – Edvard Grieg: Cello Works (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 96 kHz]

Edvard Grieg, arguably the most popular composer ever to emerge from the Scandinavian peninsula, made substantial contributions to the chamber music canon with his violin sonatas rather than with his works for cello: only one sonata for cello and piano (Op. 36) was written for this line-up. Daniel Müller-Schott, always driven to expand the musical repertoire for his instrument and with a keen sense of transcriptions, for this all-Grieg album – which is his 20th album on the label Orfeo – hence transcribed and recorded for the first time the violin sonata in C minor, Op. 45, No. 3, for the cello. Accompanied by his long-standing duo-partner Herbert Schuch on piano, the short Intermezzo in A minor (EG 115) guides us to the second part of the album, where the duo presents selected songs of various characters transcribed for cello and piano.

Baiba Skride – Violin Unlimited (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

Baiba Skride – Violin Unlimited (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 96 kHz]

On her first album for solo violin, internationally acclaimed and renowned Latvian violinist Baiba Skride interprets selected sonatas by Erwin Schulhoff, Paul Hindemith, Philipp Jarnach and Eduard Erdmann. Although Johann Sebastian Bach’s Sonatas and Partitas for Violin Solo are regarded as the measure of every violinist’s technical skill and maturity, compositions for unaccompanied violin became increasingly rare in subsequent epochs (the classical and the romantic era). It wasn’t until the turn of the 20th century that Max Reger made a conspicuous contribution in this field with altogether eleven sonatas. His example was an impetus that very plausibly inspired his contemporaries and successors to come up with the four contributions to this genre from the 1920s on this album.