Cover Fazil Say: Violin Works

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Album-Release:
2020

HRA-Release:
14.08.2020

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Fazıl Say (b. 1970): Violin Sonata No. 2, Op. 82 "Mount Ida":
  • 1Violin Sonata No. 2, Op. 82 "Mount Ida": I. Decimation of Nature09:07
  • 2Violin Sonata No. 2, Op. 82 "Mount Ida": II. Wounded Bird06:40
  • 3Violin Sonata No. 2, Op. 82 "Mount Ida": III. Rite of Hope06:12
  • Fazıl Say:
  • 4Cleopatra, Op. 3405:37
  • Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7:
  • 5Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7: I. Melancholy03:10
  • 6Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7: II. Grotesque02:07
  • 7Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7: III. Perpetuum mobile01:47
  • 8Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7: IV. Anonymous03:04
  • 9Violin Sonata No. 1, Op. 7: V. Melancholy04:06
  • Violin Concerto, Op. 25 "1001 Nights in the Harem":
  • 10Violin Concerto, Op. 25 "1001 Nights in the Harem": I. Allegro06:43
  • 11Violin Concerto, Op. 25 "1001 Nights in the Harem": II. Allegro assai06:31
  • 12Violin Concerto, Op. 25 "1001 Nights in the Harem": III. Andantino07:57
  • 13Violin Concerto, Op. 25 "1001 Nights in the Harem": IV. —06:36
  • Total Runtime01:09:37

Info for Fazil Say: Violin Works



Fazil Say is one of the worlds most prominent pianists but he is also a much-admired composer with a substantial catalogue of works. He combines both these accomplishments in his two Violin Sonatas, the first of which is suffused with Turkish motifs and dances, such as the horon. The second sonata takes as its theme the abuse of nature and the need to resist despoliation. His Violin Concerto is subtitled 1001 Nights in the Harem and is full of rich melodies and atmosphere, and features an array of Turkish percussion instruments.

Friedemann Eichhorn, violin
Fazıl Say, piano
Deutsche Radio Philharmonie Saarbrücken Kaiserslautern
Christoph Eschenbach, conductor



Friedemann Eichhorn
Born 1971 in Münster, Germany, Friedemann Eichhorn studied violin with Valery Gradow at the Mannheim University of Music. He continued his studies on the recommendation of Yehudi Menuhin with Alberto Lysy at the International Menuhin Music Academy in Switzerland and graduated from the Juilliard School New York where he worked with Margaret Pardee (violin), Earl Carlyss and Samuel Sanders (chamber music) and Miguel Harth-Bedoya (conducting). He was awarded scholarships from the National German Exchange Program, the Menuhin Academy and the Juilliard School among others. Friedemann also studied musicology and law at the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz where he earned a Ph.D.

He regularly concertizes with orchestras such as the St. Petersburg Philharmonic and Symphony, the Symphonies of Munich, Hamburg or the Radio orchestra of the SWR. Friedemann played under the baton of the late Lord Yehudi Menuhin, Howard Griffiths, Jac van Steen, Vladimir Altschuler, Alan Buribayev, David Stahl to name but a few and performed with Yuri Bashmet, Gidon Kremer, Boris Pergamenschikow, Saschko Gawriloff and Igor Oistrach. He enjoys camber music collaborations with Julius Berger, Alexander Huelshoff, José Gallardo and Thomas Müller-Pering. Friedemann Eichhorn appeared at numerous festivals such as “Chamber Music connects the World”, Kronberg, Schleswig Holstein or Menuhin Festival Gstaad as well as in music centers such as the Gewandhaus Leipzig, Gasteig Munich or the Schauspielhaus Berlin. A frequent guest of the St. Petersburg Philharmonia Friedemann will have his 5th visit in the 2007/08 season. As a conductor Friedemann Eichhorn led some 50 concerts with the Mannheim Chamber Orchestra among others. In 2008 he will conduct members of the Gustav Mahler Youth Orchestra in Mozarts opera Bastien & Bastienne.

Friedemann Eichhorn recorded several CDs and was featured in many radio broadcasts. In 2007 Friedemann Eichhorn started a collaboration with Naxos recording for the first time the concertos no. 7, 10 and 13 of the french virtuoso Pierre Rode, Nicolas Pasquet conducting the SWR Radio Orchestra Kaiserslautern.

Friedemann Eichhorn is professor for violin and director of strings at the Liszt School of Music in Weimar, Germany. He gives masterclasses at the International Summer Academy of the Mozarteum in Salzburg and the Gustav Mahler Academy in Bozen. As a guest he gave masterclasses at the University of Music in Vienna, the Guildhall School of Music London and at the Pre College Division of the Juilliard School New York. Friedemann Eichhorn serves as Artistic Director of the International Louis-Spohr-Competition for young violinists in Weimar. Much of his time he devotes to musicology and research. He wrote numerous articles for the german standard encyclopedia “Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart” and started to co-edit sheet music for the Schott music company.

In 2005 he was awarded the George Enescu Medal from the Roumanien Cultural Institute. Friedemann Eichhorn plays on a Nicola Gagliano violin from 1758.

Fazıl Say
With his extraordinary pianistic talents, Fazıl Say has been touching audiences and critics alike for more than twenty-five years, in a way that has become rare in the increasingly materialistic and elaborately organised classical music world. Concerts with this artist are something different. They are more direct, more open, more exciting; in short, they go straight to the heart. Which is exactly what the composer Aribert Reimann thought in 1986 when, during a visit to Ankara, he had the opportunity, more or less by chance, to appreciate the playing of the sixteen-year-old pianist. He immediately asked the American pianist David Levine, who was accompanying him on the trip, to come to the city’s conservatory, using the now much-quoted words: ‘You absolutely must hear him, this boy plays like a devil.’

Fazıl Say had his first piano lessons from Mithat Fenmen, who had himself studied with Alfred Cortot in Paris. Perhaps sensing just how talented his pupil was, Fenmen asked the boy to improvise every day on themes to do with his daily life before going on to complete his essential piano exercises and studies. This contact with free creative processes and forms are seen as the source of the immense improvisatory talent and the aesthetic outlook that make Fazıl Say the pianist and composer he is today. He has been commissioned to write music for, among others, the Salzburger Festspiele, the WDR and the Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, the Festspiele Mecklenburg- Vorpommern, the Konzerthaus Wien, the Dresdner Philharmonie, the Louis Vuitton Foundation, the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and the BBC. His oeuvre includes four symphonies, two oratorios, various solo concertos and numerous works for piano and chamber music.

From 1987 onwards, Fazıl Say fine-tuned his skills as a classical pianist with David Levine, first at the Musikhochschule “Robert Schumann” in Düsseldorf and later in Berlin. In addition, he regularly attended master classes with Menahem Pressler. His outstanding technique very quickly enabled him to master the so-called warhorses of the repertoire with masterful ease. It is precisely this blend of refinement (in Bach, Haydn and Mozart) and virtuoso brilliance in the works of Liszt, Mussorgsky and Beethoven that gained him victory at the Young Concert Artists international competition in New York in 1994. Since then he has played with all of the renowned American and European orchestras and numerous leading conductors, building up a multifaceted repertoire ranging from Bach, through the Viennese Classics (Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven) and the Romantics, right up to contemporary music, including his own piano compositions.

Guest appearances have taken Fazıl Say to countless countries on all five continents; the French newspaper “Le Figaro” called him ‘a genius’. He also performs chamber music regularly: for many years he was part of a fantastic duo with the violinist Patricia Kopatchinskaja. Other notable collaborators include Maxim Vengerov, the Minetti Quartet, Nicolas Altstaedt and Marianne Crebassa.

From 2005 to 2010, he was artist in residence at the Konzerthaus Dortmund; during the 2010/11 season he held the same position at the Konzerthaus Berlin. Fazıl Say was also a focal point of the programme of the Schleswig- Holstein Musik Festival in the summer of 2011. There have been further residencies and Fazıl Say festivals in Paris, Tokyo, Meran, Hamburg, and Istanbul. During the 2012/13 season Fazıl Say was the artist in residence at the hr- Sinfonieorchester Frankfurt and at the Rheingau Musik Festival 2013, where he was honoured with the Rheingau Musik Preis. In April 2015 Fazıl Say gave a successful concert with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, New York, followed by a tour with concerts throughout Europe. In 2014 he was artist in residence at the Bodenseefestival, where he played 14 concerts. During their 2015/2016 season the Alte Oper Frankfurt and the Zürcher Kammerorchester invited him to be their Artist in Residence, he spent three seasons as Artist in Residence at the Festival der Nationen in Bad Wörishofen and was Composer in Residence at the Dresdner Philharmonie in 2018/19.

In December 2016, Fazıl Say was awarded the International Beethoven Prize for Human Rights, Peace, Freedom, Poverty Reduction and Inclusion, in Bonn. In the autumn of 2017, he was awarded the Music Prize of the city of Duisburg.

His recordings of works by Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Gershwin and Stravinsky with Teldec Classics as well as Mussorgsky, Beethoven and his own works with the label naïve have been highly praised by critics and won several prizes, including three ECHO Klassik Awards. In 2014, his recording of Beethoven’s piano concerto No. 3 (with hr- Sinfonieorchester Frankfurt / Gianandrea Noseda) and Beethoven’s sonatas op. 111 and op. 27/2 Moonlight was released, as well as the CD ‘Say plays Say’, featuring his compositions for piano. Since 2016 Fazıl Say is an exclusive Warner Classics artist. In the autumn of 2016, his recording of all of Mozart sonatas was released on that label, for which, in 2017, Fazıl Say received his fourth ECHO Klassik award. Together with Nicolas Altstaedt, he recorded the album “4 Cities” (2017). In autumn 2017 Warner Classics released the Nocturnes Frédéric Chopins and the album “Secrets” with French songs, which he recorded together with Marianne Crebassa and which won the Gramophone Classical Music Award in 2018. His 2018 album is dedicated to Debussy and Satie, whilst with his most recent recording “Troy Sonata – Fazıl Say Plays Say” he presents only his own works.

Booklet for Fazil Say: Violin Works

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