Rebecca Clarke: Music For Violin, Viola & Piano Ekaterina Valiulina, Giulia Panchieri, Margherita Santi

Cover Rebecca Clarke: Music For Violin, Viola & Piano

Album info

Album-Release:
2025

HRA-Release:
29.09.2025

Label: Brilliant Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Chamber Music

Artist: Ekaterina Valiulina, Giulia Panchieri, Margherita Santi

Composer: Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Rebecca Clarke (1886 - 1979): Morpheus (Viola and Piano):
  • 1 Clarke: Morpheus (Viola and Piano) 07:25
  • Viola Sonata (Viola and Piano):
  • 2 Clarke: Viola Sonata (Viola and Piano): I. Impetuoso 08:22
  • 3 Clarke: Viola Sonata (Viola and Piano): II. Vivace 03:56
  • 4 Clarke: Viola Sonata (Viola and Piano): III. Adagio 12:06
  • Lullaby (Violin and Piano):
  • 5 Clarke: Lullaby (Violin and Piano) 03:37
  • Lullaby an Arrangement of an Ancient Irish Tune (Viola and Piano):
  • 6 Clarke: Lullaby an Arrangement of an Ancient Irish Tune (Viola and Piano) 02:43
  • Chinese Puzzle Adapted from a Chinese Tune (Violin and Piano):
  • 7 Clarke: Chinese Puzzle Adapted from a Chinese Tune (Violin and Piano) 01:22
  • Passacaglia on an Old English Tune (Viola and Piano):
  • 8 Clarke: Passacaglia on an Old English Tune (Viola and Piano) 05:22
  • Midsummer Moon (Violin and Piano):
  • 9 Clarke: Midsummer Moon (Violin and Piano) 06:50
  • I'll Bid My Heart Be Still Old Scottish Border Melody (Viola and Piano):
  • 10 Clarke: I'll Bid My Heart Be Still Old Scottish Border Melody (Viola and Piano) 03:56
  • Trio Dumka Duo Concertante for Violin and Viola, with Piano (Violin, Viola and Piano):
  • 11 Clarke: Trio Dumka Duo Concertante for Violin and Viola, with Piano (Violin, Viola and Piano) 10:22
  • Total Runtime 01:06:01

Info for Rebecca Clarke: Music For Violin, Viola & Piano



A striking portrait of Rebecca Clarke through the prism of her chamber music, covering the powerful Viola Sonata as well as a diverse sequence of miniatures and tone-pictures.

After decades of neglect, the music of Rebecca Clarke is now receiving its due attention, revealing her individuality as one of the most distinctive of English composers in the generation after Elgar. In her booklet essay, the pianist Margherita Santi recalls her introduction to Clarke and how it immediately sparked ‘deep admiration and wonder’: she finds the roots of Clarke’s style in the music of Franck and Ravel, but also the German tradition, paying tribute to the composer’s uncompromisingly individual language.

The Viola Sonata is one of Clarke’s major works, which she wrote in 1918–19 while on tour between Honolulu and Detroit, and for herself to perform. The Sonata has since entered the repertoire of solo violists with an ardent vein of expression and gritty harmony, balancing pastoralism with an unsentimental toughness which makes its occasional windows of visionary mysticism all the more effective. As Margherita Santi remarks, the Sonata evokes ‘a melancholic sensitivity: the gaze of someone who, observing the world, perceives and understands what is unseen, yet chooses not to intervene.’

The other works here are hardly less substantial, despite their smaller scale. Named after the Greek god of sleep, Morpheus (1917) inhabits a world of heavy-lidded rêverie which decorates the viola line with Szymanowskian tracery from the piano. A pair of Lullabies, harmonically simpler, are no less effective and even lovelier; a pair of folk-song settings, one Scottish, the other English, are moving in their simple restraint.

Likewise based on an English folk tune, the Passacaglia returns to the shadowy and stormy world of the Viola Sonata. Midsummer Moon (for violin and piano) is perhaps the closest Clarke came to writing in a popular salon style. Finally, the trio of instruments joins forces in a nostalgic Dumka: a masterful fusion of Czech dance style with Clarke’s own, more forward-looking perspective.

This studio recording, made in Milan in 2024, makes an ideal introduction to the world of Rebecca Clarke, presenting her in the round, through cultivated performances by musicians who feel an affinity for the composer’s trail-blazing and fearless spirit.

Ekaterina Valiulina, violin
Giulia Panchieri, viola
Margherita Santi, piano



Ekaterina Valiulina
Russian violinist Ekaterina Valiulina received her diploma in 2013 from the Moscow State Conservatory and currently pursues her Master of Music degree in performance with Sergey Krylov at the Conservatorio della Svizzera Italiana (CSI) in Lugano. She is the recipient of scholarships from the Vladimir Spivakov Foundation, the Russia for Art Foundation, and the Swiss government (ESKAS). She has performed both as a soloist and as a member of the Moscovia Chamber Orchestra and as soloist of the CSI Chamber Orchestra and Lugano Chamber Orchestra.

Booklet for Rebecca Clarke: Music For Violin, Viola & Piano

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