...forthcoming from Brilliant Classics:
https://www.jpc.de/jpcng/classic/detail/-/art/goedicke-music-for-violin-piano/hnum/10759351
Info here:
Goedicke: Music for Violin & Piano
Francesco Parrino, violin; Michele Pentrella, piano
95973
A Russian musician, born in 1877 and a cousin of Medtner, Goedicke's ephemeral fame was almost completely eclipsed in the Soviet era. He was neither rebel enough to attract the attention of the Western intellectual world, nor ambitious enough to carve out a career within the regime's apparatus.
Having completed his conservatory studies, in 1900 he competed as both composer and pianist in the third Rubinstein Competition in Vienna, winning the composition prize with his Konzertstück for piano and orchestra. Medtner, who also took part in the competition, recalls in his Memoirs that the prize for best pianist was given to the Belgian Emile Bosquet – whom he considered inferior to both himself and Goedicke – because the jury had developed a hostile attitude towards Russian pianists and did not want to bestow two prizes on Goedicke. In fact, Goedicke won in the composers' category with the Violin Sonata Op.10, as well. That Violin Sonata, composed in 1899 (but published in 1901 by Jurgenson), is dedicated to Jan Hřímalý, a Czech violinist and fellow- professor of Goedicke's at the Moscow Conservatory. The sonata's nickname, "Vesennjaja" (spring), is a clear reference to Rachmaninov's song "Spring Waters" Op.14/11, which is quoted at the beginning of the first and the end of the final movement of Goedicke's sonata. But even greater than the influence of Rachmaninov is that of German Romanticism. While Op 10 is a youthful work, the Violin Sonata Op.83, composed between 1948 and 1953 (but published only posthumously in 1972), is a clear rebuttal of Tikhon Khrennikov's notorious anti- formalist attacks (on Shostakovich and Prokofiev, among others) from a composer shielded behind decades of academic tenure. The sonata reaches far into the past, even to early Beethoven, with a construction so formally impeccable as to seem almost provocatively anachronistic. On the other hand, the 10 Pieces Op 80 ("of average difficulty, in first position"), also dating from 1948, are wholly different. Effectively combining pleasant melody and the evocation of childhood, they fit with dignity in a line stretching from Schumann's to Tchaikovsky's Albums for the Young, shedding light on Goedicke's prolific didactic side.
https://www.classicalmusicdaily.com/2021/11/november.htm
That's good news. Thanks! (Now for the 3 symphonies :) )
Agreed, Eric.
Excerpts from the first sonata can be heard on YT
(e.g. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E338nHvweD8 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E338nHvweD8)) and I found them very engaging.
Violin Sonata No.1 (1899) is breathtakingly beautiful - often quite literally so as I listened, especially in the slow movement (the middle of three).
I've never heard anything of Goedicke's which I found particularly attractive or interesting, but this sounds worth investigating.
The whole CD can be heard on Francesco Parrino's Youtube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lRlXDTFSkdiV4VwjXaExXFXfXYG0oWDWI
It's also on Spotify.