Cover Trip to Russia

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2018

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
12.10.2018

Label: Orfeo

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Interpret: Daniel Müller-Schott, Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin & Aziz Shokhakimov

Komponist: Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski (1840-1893), Alexander Glazunov (1865 - 1936), Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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Formate & Preise

FormatPreisIm WarenkorbKaufen
FLAC 48 $ 13,20 $ 11,90
  • Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski (1840 - 1893):
  • 1Pezzo capriccioso, Op. 62, TH 6207:00
  • Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski (1840 - 1893), Alexander Glazunov (1865 - 1936): Souvenir d'un lieu cher, Op. 42, TH 116 (Arr. for Cello & Orchestra):
  • 2I. Méditation10:37
  • 3II. Scherzo04:03
  • 4III. Mélodie03:55
  • Alexander Glazunov (1865 - 1936): 2 Pieces for Cello & Orchestra, Op. 20:
  • 5No. 1, Mélodie06:53
  • 6No. 2, Sérénade espagnole02:42
  • Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski (1840 - 1893): Variations on a Rococo Theme, Op. 33, TH 57:
  • 7Moderato assai quasi andante00:58
  • 8Tema. Moderato semplice01:38
  • 9Var. 1, Tempo del tema00:55
  • 10Var. 2, Tempo del tema01:19
  • 11Var. 3, Andante sostenuto03:51
  • 12Var. 4, Andante grazioso01:58
  • 13Var. 5, Allegro moderato03:36
  • 14Var. 6, Andante02:46
  • 15Coda. Allegro vivo02:12
  • String Quartet No. 1 in D Major, Op. 11, TH 111:
  • 16II. Andante cantabile (Version for Cello & Orchestra)06:42
  • Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov (1844 - 1908):
  • 17Sérénade, Op. 37 (Version for Cello & Orchestra)04:03
  • Pjotr Iljitsch Tschaikowski (1840 - 1893): 6 Pieces, Op. 19, TH 133:
  • 18No. 4, Nocturne (Version for Cello & Orchestra)04:31
  • Alexander Glazunov (1865 - 1936):
  • 19Chant du ménestrel, Op. 7104:21
  • Total Runtime01:14:00

Info zu Trip to Russia

Seltenes russisches Cello-Repertoire: Aus der Alten Welt: Vielleicht ist ja relative Begrenztheit eines Repertoires auch ein Vorteil. Die riesigen Welten etwa des Opernschaffens Verdis, von Bachs Kantatenwerk, der Lieder Schuberts oder von Haydns Symphonien scheinen so unüberschaubar, daß man sich völlig überfordert fühlen kann.

Beim Cello-Repertoire ist es ganz anders, und Daniel Müller-Schott scheint es jedes Mal regelrecht zu genießen, aus dieser Not eine Tugend zu machen, auf jeweils eigene Weise zu Hauptwerken der Literatur hinzuführen und sie individuell zu beleuchten.

Sein neues rein russisches Programm kreist um Tschaikowskys Rokoko-Variationen. Mit weiteren Werken von Tschaikowsky, Rimsky-Korsakov und Alexander Glasunow finden sich hier Vertreter einer mit Glasunows Tod bis 1936 reichenden Spätromantik vereint, die sich in der Wirklichkeit ein einziges Mal zu dritt begegneten – bei der Einweihung einer Glinka-Statue 1885.

Ansonsten verband sie ein komplexes, auch spannungsvolles Verhältnis, wie es im ausführlichen Künstler-Interview von Meret-Forster im Beiheft en detail nachvollziehbar wird. Müller-Schott macht erlebbar, dass die Rokoko-Variationen einerseits die Mozart-Liebe Tschaikowskys und seine „moderne“, noble historische Reflektiertheit enthalten – aber auch seine intensive Emotionalität. Daneben führt er das schon als originales Violinwerk völlig unbekannte dreiteilige „Souvenir d’un lieu cher“ von Tschaikowsky vor, auf der Violine schwer genug, auf das Cello übertragen vom Solisten selbst (und orchestriert von Glasunow) eine Herausforderung der Extraklasse – die nebenbei das Repertoire erweitert.

Diese und noch weitere genremäßig höchst unterhaltsam und lehrreich verschieden geartete Werke von einem gestandenen Solisten zu hören, der selber noch Schüler des russischen Monuments Rostropowitsch war, gibt dem Interpreten hier selber schon eine historische Dimension. Immerhin schon mehr als ein Vierteljahrhundert ist es her, daß er 1992 den 1. Preis im Tschaikowsky-Wettbewerb für Junge Musiker gewann, dem Beginn seiner internationalen Karriere – die in ihrer Konstanz inzwischen schon viel länger währt, als es in unseren kurzlebigen Zeiten selbstverständlich ist.

Daniel Müller-Schott, Cello
Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin
Aziz Shokhakimov, Dirigent




Daniel Müller-Schott
is one of the most sought-after cellists in the world, and can be heard on all the great international concert stages. For more than two decades now he has been enchanting audiences as an ambassador for classical music in the 21st century. The New York Times refers to his "intensive expressiveness" and describes him as a "fearless player with outstanding technique". (New York Times).

Daniel Müller-Schott guests with important leading international orchestras; in the US with the orchestras in New York, Boston, Cleveland, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Los Angeles; in Europe the Berliner Philharmoniker, the Gewandhausorchestra Leipzig, the Radio Orchestras from Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Leipzig and Hamburg, Copenhagen and Paris, the London Symphony and Philharmonic Orchestra, the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, the Netherlands Philharmonic Orchestra, the Spanish National Orchestra as well as in Australia with the Sydney and Melbourne Symphony Orchestra and in Asia with Tokyo’s NHK Symphony Orchestra, Taiwan’s National Symphony Orchestra (NSO) und Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra.

All over the world Daniel Müller-Schott has appeared in concert with such renowned conductors as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Thomas Dausgaard, Charles Dutoit, Christoph Eschenbach, Iván Fischer, Alan Gilbert, Gustavo Gimeno, Bernard Haitink, Neeme Järvi, Dmitrij Kitajenko, Susanna Mälkki, Andris Nelsons, Gianandrea Noseda, Andrés Orozco-Estrada, Kirill Petrenko, André Previn, Michael Sanderling and Krzysztof Urbański. Many years of musical collaboration linked him with Kurt Masur, Lorin Maazel and Yakov Kreizberg.

In addition to performances of the great cello concertos, Daniel Müller-Schott has a special interest in discovering unknown works and extending the cello repertoire, e.g. with his own adaptations and through cooperation with contemporary composers.

Sir André Previn and Peter Ruzicka dedicated cello concertos to the cellist which were premiered under the direction of the composers with the Gewandhausorchestra Leipzig and the Kammerphilharmonie Bremen. Last year, to much acclaim from the press, Daniel Müller-Schott performed the premiere of Berger's "Rime Sparse" for soprano and piano trio in Chicago and then in New York. Both the US-born Sebastian Currier as well as Olli Mustonen have composed a cello sonata for Daniel Müller-Schott.

Highlights of the season 2018/19 include the opening concert Settimane Musicali di Ascona with the Tonhalle Orchestra Zürich and Krzysztof Urbański, concerts with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and Lionel Bringuier, in den USA with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and Karina Kannellaki, and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and Gilbert Varga, as well as the Spanish Radio Television Symphony Orchestra and Erik Nielson. There are three extended recital tours on the concert calendar: a solo recital tour to Asia, a trio tour with Julia Fischer and Nils Mönkemeyer as well as with Baiba Skride and Xavier de Maistre. Daniel Müller-Schott will play the premiere of Currier's piano trio with Anne-Sophie Mutter and Lambert Orkis in New York's Carnegie Hall, followed by a stop in Chicago. At the Mecklenburg-Vorpommern Music Festival Daniel Müller-Schott is artistic director for the Rügen Classical Music Spring Festival 2019.

International music festivals regularly invite Daniel Müller-Schott to perform, including the London Proms, the Schubertiade, Schleswig-Holstein, Rheingau, Schwetzingen, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the Heidelberg Spring Festival and the Vancouver Festival, and, in the USA, festivals in Tanglewood, Ravinia and the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles. In his chamber music concerts, Daniel Müller-Schott collaborates, inter alia with Nicolas Angelich, Kit Armstrong, Renaud Capuçon, Xavier de Maistre, Julia Fischer, Igor Levit, Nils Mönkemeyer, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Francesco Piemontesi, Lauma and Baiba Skride and Simon Trpčeski.

Daniel Müller-Schott has been involved for many years now in the project "Rhapsody in School". He regularly gives master classes and helps to support young musicians in Europe, the USA, Asia and Australia.

Since his childhood, Daniel Müller-Schott has felt a great love for the music of Johann Sebastian Bach. For his first CD record he chose the Six Suites for Cello Solo for Bach’s jubilee in 2000.

Daniel Müller-Schott has already built up a sizeable discography in a career spanning twenty years under the ORFEO, Deutsche Grammophon, Hyperion, Pentatone and EMI Classics labels and includes among others, works from Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Mozart, Haydn, Schumann, Mendelssohn, Prokofiev, Schubert, Khachaturian, Shostakovich, Elgar, Walton, Britten and Dvořák.

His recordings have been enthusiastically received by both the public and the press and have also received numerous awards, including the Gramophone Editor’s Choice, Strad Selection, and the BBC Music Magazine’s “CD of the month”. He has been awarded the Quarterly Prize of German Record Critics for his recordings of the Elgar and Walton Cello Concertos with Oslo Philharmonic and André Previn and for his CD of the Shostakovich Cello Concertos recorded with the Bavarian Radio Orchestra and Yakov Kreizberg. In France the "Solo Suites" by Benjamin Britten were awarded with the Diapason d’or and "Dvořák The Cello Works" with the "Choc de Classica". For "Duo Sessions" Daniel Müller-Schott and Julia Fischer received the International Classical Music Award (ICMA) 2017. On his new CD to appear in fall 2018 with ORFEO, Daniel Müller-Schott recorded works by Tchaikovsky, Glasunow and Rimski-Korsakov with the German Symphony-Orchestra Berlin and Aziz Shokhakimov.

Daniel Müller-Schott can be regularly experienced on national and international radio broadcasters and on the TV channels ARD, ZDF, ARTE and 3Sat as a soloist in concert recordings and as an interview guest.

Daniel Müller-Schott studied under Walter Nothas, Heinrich Schiff and Steven Isserlis. He was supported personally by Anne-Sophie Mutter and received, among other things, the Aida Stucki Prize as well as a year of private tuition under Mstislaw Rostropovich. At the age of fifteen, Daniel Müller-Schott won the first prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians in 1992 in Moscow.

Beside the music Daniel Mueller-Schott has also a considerable affinity for the fine arts, in particular for French paintings of the 19th century. During his travels he always visits the major museums, seeing the great masters in the original. The cellist regularly takes part in art projects himself, for example in the "Street Art“ project in Munich, Berlin (ARTE) and Melbourne 2016.

Daniel Müller-Schott plays the “Ex Shapiro” Matteo Goffriller cello, made in Venice in 1727.



Booklet für Trip to Russia

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