Avi Avital: The Verbier Recital (Live) Avi Avital

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
22.03.2024

Label: Verbier Festival Gold

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Avi Avital

Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750), Ernest Bloch (1880-1959), Filippo Sauli (1660-1720), Yasuo Kuwahara (1946-2003

Album including Album cover

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  • Ernest Bloch (1880 - 1959): Baal Shem, B. 47:
  • 1Bloch: Baal Shem, B. 47: II. Nigun (Arr. Avital for Mandolin) (Live)05:58
  • Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 - 1750): Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin):
  • 2Bach: Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin): I. Allemande (Live)04:38
  • 3Bach: Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin): II. Courante (Live)02:50
  • 4Bach: Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin): III. Sarabande (Live)03:33
  • 5Bach: Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin): IV. Gigue (Live)04:52
  • 6Bach: Partita No. 2 for Solo Violin in D Minor, BWV 1004 (Arr. Avital for Mandolin): V. Chaconne (Live)14:08
  • Yasuo Kuwahara (b. 1946): Poème improvisé (Live):
  • 7Kuwahara: Poème improvisé (Live)07:31
  • Filippo Sauli (1512 - 1528): Partita No. 3 in C Major:
  • 8Sauli: Partita No. 3 in C Major: I. Preludio (Live)00:24
  • 9Sauli: Partita No. 3 in C Major: II. Allemande (Live)01:12
  • 10Sauli: Partita No. 3 in C Major: III. Courrente (Live)01:01
  • 11Sauli: Partita No. 3 in C Major: IV. Aria (Live)01:41
  • 12Sauli: Partita No. 3 in C Major: V. Giga (Live)01:12
  • Avi Avital (b. 1978): Kedma for Re-Tuned Mandolin (Live):
  • 13Avital: Kedma for Re-Tuned Mandolin (Live)05:13
  • Traditional: Bučimiš (Live):
  • 14Traditional: Bučimiš (Live)05:32
  • Total Runtime59:45

Info for Avi Avital: The Verbier Recital (Live)



The studio recordings of mandolinist Avi Avital have always been characterised by fiery charisma. But hearing the Israeli virtuoso in the context of a live performance gives him an extra dimension of spontaneity. His 2015 solo recital at the Verbier Festival - with works by Bloch, Sauli, Kuwahara, Bach and Avi Avital himself - brings out a level of energy that is completely unique, especially in the solo mandolin niche.

Dewy and glittering: gold. For David Bruce, this is the colour of the sound of string instruments with mandolin. Consequently, Cymbeline, which the Brit composed for mandolin virtuoso Avi Avital, shines and shimmers in enchantingly bright tones as it traces the course of the sun from morning to evening in three movements. Compositions by Johann Sebastian Bach, Joseph Haydn and Béla Bartók provide a worthy setting for the work, which was only written in 2013: the familiar pieces are presented in arrangements for mandolin and ensemble in a dewy, light-footed sound - and naturally give Avi Avital ample opportunity to amaze us with his virtuosity. Traditional music from Avital's native Israel as well as from Bulgaria and Turkey rounds off the multi-faceted programme with which the likeable star and his fellow musicians wrap the Michel in golden sounds.

Avi Avital, mandolin


Avi Avital
Grammy®-nominated mandolin virtuoso Avi Avital has been acclaimed for his “exquisitely sensitive playing” and “stunning agility” by the New York Times, while Israel’s Haaretz has described Avital’s playing as “everything you never dreamt a mandolin could do . . . truly breathtaking in virtuosity and dedication.”

Avi Avital was born in 1978 in the southern Israeli city of Beersheba (Be’er Sheva). He began learning the mandolin at the age of eight and soon joined the flourishing mandolin youth orchestra founded and directed by his charismatic teacher, the Russian-born violinist Simcha Nathanson. After attending the Jerusalem Academy of Music, Avital went to Italy, where he studied at the Cesare Pollini Conservatory of Padua with Ugo Orlandi, “a real mandolin professor, with whom I learned the original repertoire of the mandolin, rather than the transcriptions of violin music I’d specialized in until then”.

Finding this music “beautiful, but rather limited”, Avital faced what he has described as something of an identity crisis: the music he most loved to play was not necessarily that written for his own instrument. Eventually he found his true direction: “One of my aims is to redevelop and redefine the mandolin and its repertoire”, he has declared. “I’m inspired by the way Segovia transformed the classical guitar.” In 2007, Avital became the first mandolin player ever to win Israel’s prestigious Aviv competition for soloists.

Avital’s performances have been received with great enthusiasm at such leading international venues as New York’s Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, London’s Wigmore Hall, the Berlin Philharmonie, the Vienna Konzerthaus, Lucerne’s KKL and the Forbidden City Concert Hall in Beijing as well as at the Tanglewood, Spoleto and Ravenna festivals. He has appeared with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Berliner Symphoniker, I Pomeriggi Musicali di Milano and the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center and collaborated extensively with artists such as clarinettist Giora Feidman (his great mentor), soprano Dawn Upshaw and trumpeter-composer Frank London. His 2012 calendar included appearances with the San Francisco and Geneva Chamber orchestras and the Berlin Chamber Soloists as well as recitals (many featuring Bach) in the US, Italy, Belgium, Germany, Poland and Japan.

Among his 2013 highlights are a collaboration with Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road workshop on a new composition by David Bruce; performances of “Avital meets Avital”, a cross-genre programme with New York-based jazz artist Omer Avital in Berlin and at Schloss Elmau; and concerto performances at the Schleswig-Holstein and Aspen festivals, as well as with the Colorado and National Taiwan Symphony orchestras, Belgrade Philharmonic, Orchestre National de Montpellier, Oxford Philomusica, Potsdam Kammerakademie, Geneva Camerata and Berliner Camerata. Plans for 2014 include an Australian tour with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, concertos with the National Taiwan Symphony Orchestra and at the Savannah Festival, and recitals in Berlin, Vancouver, New York (Carnegie Hall), Riga and Montreal.

Avital has released numerous recordings in the disparate genres of klezmer, Baroque and new classical music. He won Germany’s prestigious ECHO prize for his 2008 recording with the David Orlowsky Trio. In 2010 he became the first mandolin player to receive a Grammy® nomination in the category “Best Instrumental Soloist”, for his recording of Avner Dorman’s Mandolin Concerto with Andrew Cyr and the Metropolis Ensemble.

In 2012 Avi Avital signed an exclusive agreement with Deutsche Grammophon. His debut album, released in August of that year, features his own transcriptions of Bach concertos for harpsichord and violin in arrangements for mandolin and orchestra. His next recording is entitled Between Worlds. Scheduled for release in January 2014, this genre-defying tour of the globe ranges from Dvořák, Bloch, Villa-Lobos and Piazzolla to folk dances from Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Spain and Cuba and features guest artists including Richard Galliano, Giora Feidman and Catrin Finch.

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