Stephen Pritchard 

Brahms: Violin Sonatas, Ilya Grubert (violin), Alena Cherny (piano) – review

Ilya Grubert veers between the forthright and disengaged in his rendering of Brahms's violin concertos, says Stephen Pritchard
  
  


The opening passage of the first movement of Brahms's G major sonata is one of the most beautiful in all chamber music – an exquisite, elegiac melody that requires the sweetest playing to draw out its delicate, autumnal melancholy. How regrettable, then, that Ilya Grubert – wonderfully forthright in the strident development passages – fails to bring any warmth to that perfect moment, choosing instead a hollow, bleached tone that drains it of all humanity. He finds a rounder, fuller sound for the allegretto grazioso of the second sonata, but returns to his strange disengagement for the third sonata's adagio, with poor Alena Cherny trying in vain to conjure some magic.

 

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