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101. Music | Hilary Hahn/Neville Marriner/Academy Of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
It didn’t really work, but in this recording, hilary hahn has realized somethingclose to Gould’s notion with the Brahms Violin Concerto.
http://www.bostonphoenix.com/boston/music/otr/documents/02184437.htm
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Hilary Hahn/Neville Marriner/Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields
BRAHMS and STRAVINSKY: VIOLIN CONCERTOS
(SONY CLASSICAL)
Glenn Gould once played the Brahms D-minor Piano Concerto at an absurdly slow tempo, his intention being to eliminate the antagonistic relationship between orchestra and soloist that’s taken to be a hallmark of the Romantic concerto. It didn’t really work, but in this recording, Hilary Hahn has realized something close to Gould’s notion with the Brahms Violin Concerto. Hahn and Marriner turn in an ear-opening performance that invites you to reconsider this work’s profile. Instead of the imposing drama you expect, this performance gives prominence to the interaction between the two camps. Fleet tempos, a chamber-sized orchestra, and an emphasis on dialogue yield an interpretation that Gould might well have labeled "Baroquish." Hahn’s playing shows that she’s no longer a prodigy but a mature violinist with a gorgeous, lyrical tone. Marriner not only gets great playing out of the ASMF winds — a bobble in the Adagio’s famous oboe melody notwithstanding — but also lightens up the textures and allows Brahms’s imitative writing and imaginative scoring to shine through. Here and there I wished for more weight and heavier accents from the orchestra, but not often enough to dull the pleasure of this rethink. Not even minor quibbles attach to the Stravinsky performance. One of the quirkier products of his neo-classical phase, the Violin Concerto sounds like an unholy marriage between Bach and drunken polka music. Although not written in the virtuoso style, it makes formidable demands on the soloist, and these Hahn dispatches not only with ease but with great humor. Marriner matches her step for step, showing off the wild colors and off-kilter rhythms of Stravinsky’s score. The composer’s own recording with Isaac Stern sounds leaden and brittle by comparison.

102. || San Francisco Performances
hilary hahn, violin. with Natalie Zhu, piano. October 30, 2004 800 pm. NOTES ONTHE PROGRAM. Sonata No. 3 in C Major for Unaccompanied Violin, BWV 1005
http://www.performances.org/encores_note/hahn.asp
Hilary Hahn, violin with Natalie Zhu, piano October 30, 2004 8:00 pm NOTES ON THE PROGRAM Sonata No. 3 in C Major for Unaccompanied Violin, BWV 1005 JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH Born March 21, 1685, Eisenach Died July 28, 1750, Leipzig Bach's six sonatas and partitas for unaccompanied violin date from about 1720, when Bach was Kapellmeister at the court of Anhalt-Cöthen. The three partitas are suites of dance movements, but the three sonatas are in somewhat stricter forms: not sonata form as it evolved later in the eighteenth century, but sonata di chiesa (literally, "church sonata") form, suggesting a more serious character than a collection of dance movements. Bach's unaccompanied violin sonatas all have four movements in a slow-fast-slow-fast sequence, and the second movement is always a fugue. Bach was famed in his own day as a virtuoso organist, and-like virtually all composers of his era-he also played the violin. Very probably he played in the orchestra at Cöthen, but it is known that he preferred to play viola in chamber music, and in fact we know nothing about Bach's skill as a violinist: his biographer Phillipp Spitta has noted that in all of the writings about Bach by family and contemporaries there is not one mention of his ability as a violinist. What is indisputable, however, is that his understanding of the instrument was profound. The violin is essentially a linear, lyrical instrument; Bach's music for it, however, is contrapuntal, requiring continual multiple-stopping and the most sophisticated technique imaginable.

103. Hilary Hahn -«Bach Concertos»[MP3!] ? VeryCD
Violin Concertos»MP3!
http://lib.verycd.com/2004/12/11/0000030247.html

104. Arborweb Reviews - Review: Hilary Hahn
Beyond all argument, hilary hahn is an amazing young (twentyfour) violin virtuoso.Her 1999 recording of Bach s Ciaccona for Sony Classics was a technical
http://www.arborweb.com/reviews/0402.hilaryhahn-review.html

Hilary Hahn Practically perfect Along with the Bach, Hahn will be performing two sonatas by Mozart and one by Ysaye. The Mozarts are light and delightful, and the Ysaye supervirtuosic. While it will be interesting to hear what Hahn does with delightful and supervirtuosic pieces, the sublime Ciaccona is what everyone will be there to hear Hahn play.

105. Beethoven: Violin Concerto; Bernstein / Hahn, Zinman Music CD Is Available From
Click Here to Buy the Beethoven Violin Concerto; Bernstein / hahn, Zinman Music CD . hilary hahn and David Zinman give a persuasive performance of
http://www.bestprices.com/cgi-bin/vlink/074646058428BT.html
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Browse Music Genres Blues Cajun Children's Classical ... Spoken Word Beethoven: Violin Concerto; Bernstein / Hahn, Zinman
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Part Number: 074646058428BT Release: 01/26/1999 Classical Works in Detail: Concerto for Violin in D major, Op. 61 (Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827)) Length: 43:55 - Period: Classical Recorded in at Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, Baltimore, MD 6/1998 Written 1806 Vienna, Austria Notes: Hilary Hahn performs cadenzas by Fritz Kreisler in this selection. Serenade for Violin and Orchestra "after Plato's Symposium" (Composer: Leonard Bernstein (1918 - 1990)) Length: 30:31 - Period: 20th Century Recorded in at Meyerhoff Symphony Hall, Baltimore, MD 2/1998 Written 1954 USA Notes: This recording was nominated for the 2000 Grammy Award for "Best Instrumental Soloist(s) Performance (with Orchestra)." This disc was Gramophone magazine's "Recording of the Month" for March 1999.

106. Hilary Hahn
hilary hahn. The violin has produced more child prodigies than any other musicalinstrument. Many of them grew up to become world stars from Yehudi
http://www.georghirsch.com/summaries/eng/1998/ghhahnme.html

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