| Sonata (Sonatina) for Violin and Piano in D major, D. 384 (Op. 137, No. 1) | ||
| 1 | Allegro molto | 4. 10 |
| 2 | Andante | 4. 25 |
| 3 | Allegro vivace | 4. 00 |
| Sonata (Sonatina) for Violin and Piano in A minor, D. 385 (Op. 137, No. 2) | ||
| 4 | Allegro moderato | 6. 48 |
| 5 | Andante | 7. 29 |
| 6 | Menuetto (Allegro) | 2. 13 |
| 7 | Allegro | 4. 36 |
| Sonata (Sonatina) for Violin and Piano in G minor, D. 408 (Op. 137, No. 3) | ||
| 8 | Allegro giusto | 4. 46 |
| 9 | Andante | 4. 43 |
| 10 | Menuetto (Allegro vivace) | 2. 28 |
| 11 | Allegro moderato | 4. 04 |
| Rondo for Violin and Piano in B minor “Rondo Brillant”, D. 895 (Op. 70) | ||
| 12 | Andante - Allegro | 14. 28 |
| Total playing time: | 64. 31 | |

Franz Schubert (1797 – 1828) PTC 5186 347 Download Biographies - Discographies in PDF Julia Fischer Martin Helmchen
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Franz Schubert (1797 – 1828) The great similarity between the first movement (Allegro molto) of Franz Schubert’s Sonata for Violin and Piano in D major, D. 384 (Op. posth. 137, No. 1, dating from 1816) and the first movement of the Sonata for Piano and Violin in E minor, K. 304 by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart must have already been emphasised hundreds of times. The analogies are more than simply astonishing, they are essential – and at the same time, existential. Deliberately so: because at the age of 19, Schubert had well outgrown the need to “crib”. Nevertheless, Schubert imitated his example in every aspect of this Mozart-like movement, including the transitions, secondary motifs and even in the manner he dealt with the rests. And yet he achieved more than simply a “copy”. Schubert’s Allegro molto is a reflection, a kind of “question set to music”: where do I want to go? And the answer must be: I got there a long time since! Because all the later characteristics that gradually emerged to define his personality as a composer (i.e. abrupt stops, harmonic surprises, the ecstasy of the moment vs. the dashing of hope) are already present here and are leading him, as it were, “through Mozart up to himself”. To Franz Schubert.
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Yakov Kreizberg |
“Julia Fischer has previously recorded the violin concertos for PentaTone (5186 064 and 5186 064); it will come as no surprise to anyone acquainted with those fine discs that the present issue has a legitimate claim to being the best Mozart orchestral recording of the past year”.
Stepen Habington. La Scena Musicale
“This disc is the icing on the cake of Fischer’s Mozart concerto series on PentaTone and is another distinguished addition to her burgeoning discography. Let’s hope we don’t have to wait too long for the next.”
Hugo Shirley, MusicalCriticism.com
“Fischer’s outstanding recordings of the solo violin concertos obviously had to be completed with the “concertante” works and the C major Rondo (K373), and they don’t disappoint…..If you have the solo concerto discs, you won’t want to miss this.” (Classical CD of the week)
Hugh Canning, The Sunday Times
“The qualities which made Fischer’s earlier CDs of Mozart’s solo concertos so appetising are here in spades, starting with Kreizberg’s handling of the orchestra. Just listen to the start of the great Sinfonia Concertante, and it’s replete with an energy which doesn’t preclude sensitivity of phrasing or detail of instrumental colour. As the boundaries between “authentic” and “modern” performances become more blurred, this shows that what could have been a stylistic compromise can be transmuted into a triumph.”
Martin Cotton, BBC Music Magazine
“Julia Fischer has previously recorded the violin concertos for PentaTone (5186 064 and 5186 064); it will come as no surprise to anyone acquainted with those fine discs that the present issue has a legitimate claim to being the best Mozart orchestral recording of the past year.”
Stephen Habington, La Scena Musicale
“This is the most rewarding bonus to Julia Fischer’s spirited recordings of Mozart’s Violin concertos with Yakov kreizberg, especially as the level of the composer’s invention in the Sinfonia concertante is so transcendent…… this new release is hard to beat”
Ian Jullier, International Record review
“A vital, graceful Mozart partnership puts this version amongst the best.”
Richard Wigmore, Gramophone
Julia Fischer
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Netherlands
Philharmonic Orchestra Amsterdam |
Daniel Müller-Schott In only a few years, Daniel Müller-Schott has succeeded in establishing
himself throughout the world as one of the supreme cellists. With his
sure sense of style and enormous musical maturity, he opens up new
paths for his audiences, including ones leading to works already thought
to be well-known. He is constantly searching for both new and rare
old works with which he can extend his repertoire on the cello, including
with his own adaptations, and in particular performances of the music
of the 20th and 21st centuries. |