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Violin Sonatas
Béla Bartók - Paul Hindemith - Francis Poulenc

Violin Sonatas

Elias David Moncado & Hansjacob Staemmler

Label: CAvi
Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085534920
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Catalog number: AVI 8553492
Releasedate: 22-04-22
- Elias David Moncado, 21 years old, German-Spanish-Malaysion Violinist , has won many 1st prizes and is regarded as one of the most potential Top-Top classical artist in the new future.
- He already played with famous orchestras and is traveling the world
- He is still studying, currently his teacher is Pierre Amoyal at the Mozarteum Salzburg.
- Hansjacob Staemmler is professor at the Frankfurt University, playing with a lot of No. 1 artists in many chamber music teams.
ELIAS DAVID MONCADO  ; VIOLIN SONATAS  HINDEMITH  POULENC BARTOK

For your debut album, what motivated you to choose a rather difficult program with works by Hindemith, Bartók, and Poulenc? Are they currently your favorite composers? Have you performed these works often in recitals? As an artist, I find it fascinating to observe how composers reacted to current affairs: whenever they had to deal with a totalitarian regime, persecution, resistance, or exile.

Each of these three composers dealt in some special way with psychological stress and anxiety in their lives. In the Poulenc sonata I find a concealed passion, harsh brutality, and overwhelming pain. The Hindemith sonata contrasts and juxtaposes sombre, dancelike, and heroic elements. The timbres in the Bartók are incredibly elaborate, and a general mood of suffering imbues the entire work.

What makes works of the early 20th century so interesting for a young violinist such as yourself? Do you find them easier or more difficult than music from the 18th or 19th centuries?

For me, the 20th century is one of the most thrilling and drastic periods in history: this is reflected in the music. Composers took greater risks and experimented with a number of new playing techniques. I would find it hard to say which periods I generally find easier or more difficult. Each style has its own particular challenges; still, I generally manage to develop a good rapport with all the pieces I work on. Works of the 18th and 19th centuries are evidently more often performed and recorded than those of the 20th.

The great number of “benchmark recordings” of works of the 18th and 19th centuries means that you tend to be compared with those interpretations and placed under greater scrutiny. Certain personal approaches adopted by famous artists have become widespread. In works of the 20th century, however, I feel a much greater artistic freedom. (excerpt from the booklet interview)