Rebecca Clarke - Sonatas for Violin, Viola & Piano Vladimir Stoupel & Judith Ingolfsson

Cover Rebecca Clarke - Sonatas for Violin, Viola & Piano

Album info

Album-Release:
2023

HRA-Release:
19.01.2024

Label: Oehms Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Vladimir Stoupel & Judith Ingolfsson

Composer: Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Rebecca Clarke (1886 - 1979): Sonata for Viola and Piano:
  • 1 Clarke: Sonata for Viola and Piano: I. Impetuoso 08:27
  • 2 Clarke: Sonata for Viola and Piano: II. Vivace 04:05
  • 3 Clarke: Sonata for Viola and Piano: III. Adagio - Agitato 11:52
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano in D Major:
  • 4 Clarke: Sonata for Violin and Piano in D Major: I. Allegro Comodo 09:14
  • 5 Clarke: Sonata for Violin and Piano in D Major: II. Andante quasi adagio 07:43
  • 6 Clarke: Sonata for Violin and Piano in D Major: III. Finale Scherzando. Allegro 08:18
  • Sonata for Violin and Piano in G Major:
  • 7 Clarke: Sonata for Violin and Piano in G Major 11:56
  • Total Runtime 01:01:35

Info for Rebecca Clarke - Sonatas for Violin, Viola & Piano



Born in London in 1886, violinist/violist Rebecca Clarke was also a composer who produced a significant number of works; her songs and chamber music were particularly notable. Although her output became neglected after the Second World War, it experienced a renaissance in the 1970s. The performances on this album take the listener on a journey through the eloquence and profundity of Rebecca Clarke’s creative world. This is OehmsClassics’ second album featuring Judith Ingolfsson (violin, viola) and Vladimir Stoupel (piano), furthering the label’s commitment to presenting musical discoveries.

Judith Ingolfsson, violin, viola
Vladimir Stoupel, piano



Judith Ingolfsson
is recognized for her intense, commanding performances, uncompromising musical maturity, and charismatic performance style. Based in Berlin and Baltimore and enjoying a global career, she performs regularly as soloist, chamber musician and in recital as the Duo Ingolfsson-Stoupel, founded in 2006. The New York Times has characterized her playing as producing “both fireworks and a singing tone” and Strings Magazine described her tone as “gorgeous, intense, and variable, flawlessly pure and beautiful in every register.”

She has collaborated with conductors such as Wolfgang Sawallisch, Raymond Leppard, Gilbert Varga, Jesús López-Cobos, Rico Saccani, Gerard Schwarz, and Leonard Slatkin, and appeared with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the National Symphony Orchestra, the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, the Royal Chamber Orchestra of Tokyo, the Budapest Philharmonic Orchestra, and the Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester Frankfurt (Oder). Concerts have taken her through almost the entire USA and to many other countries, including Germany, France, Spain,the Czech Republic, Russia, China, Japan, Hungary, Iceland, Puerto Rico, Panama, Hong Kong and Macau. She has played in many of the world’s most famous venues, including the Konzerthaus Berlin, the Tokyo Opera City, the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., and New York’s Carnegie Hall. Her extensive discography includes 13 CDs on labels including Audite, Genuin, Accentus and OehmsClassics.

Judith Ingolfsson studied at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and at the Cleveland Institute of Music with Jascha Brodsky, David Cerone, and Donald Weilerstein. In addition to winning the Gold Medal at the International Violin Competition of Indianapolis in 1998, Judith Ingolfsson was also a prizewinner at the Premio Paganini Competition in Genoa and at the Concert Artists Guild Competition in New York. In 1999, she was honored by National Public Radio as Debut Artist of the Year.

She is currently Professor of Violin at the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins University, co-artistic director and founder of the Festival “Aigues-Vives en Musiques” in France and the Festival “The Last Rose of Summer” in Berlin, Germany. She performs on a Lorenzo Guadagnini violin, crafted in 1750, and a viola by Yair Hod Fainas.

Vladimir Stoupel
is an individualist with an extraordinarily rich tonal and emotional palette. The Washington Post praised his “protean range of expression” and Der Tagesspiegel Berlin described his performance as “enthralling and atmospherically dense.” His extraordinary technical command allows him to explore the outermost limits of expression, mesmerizing audiences with his musical intensity. After a solo recital, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung granted the pianist a critic’s greatest compliment: “Unforgettable!”

Vladimir Stoupel has been a guest soloist with orchestras including the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, the Konzerthaus Orchestra Berlin, the Gewandhaus Orchestra Leipzig, the Symphony Orchestra of the Bavarian Radio, the German Symphony Orchestra and the Radio Symphony Orchestra Berlin, the Bochum Symphony Orchestra, the Staatskapelle Weimar, the Staatskapelle Mainz, and the Staatsphilharmonie Kassel. In the United States, he has been heard with orchestras including the Wheeling Symphony, Lancaster Symphony and Lake Placid Sinfonietta. He has collaborated with conductors such as Christian Thielemann, Michail Jurowski, Leopold Hager, Marek Janowski, Steven Sloane, Stefan Malzew, Patrik Ringborg, and Günther Neuhold.

Vladimir Stoupel has appeared on many of the world’s notable stages, including Berlin’s Philharmonic Hall and Konzerthaus, Avery Fisher Hall in New York, the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, Hamburg’s Grosse Musikhalle, and Dortmund’s Konzerthaus, to name just a few. Festival appearances include the renowned Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, Piano en Valois (France), Brandenburgische Sommerkonzerte (Germany), Printemps des Arts in Monte Carlo, the Helsinki Festival, and Festival La Grange de Meslay in Tours (France).

Together with the violinist Judith Ingolfsson he is a co-artistic director and founder of the international festival Aigues-Vives en Musiques (France) as well as co-artistic director of the international festival The Last Rose Of Summer in Berlin.

Stoupel’s interest in breaking up the at times rigid incrustations of the concert business and – in addition to the cultivation of the classics – in dedicating himself to the unjustly forgotten “edges of the repertoire” is also reflected in his CD recordings and diverse chamber music activities. Thus, in 2007, he released a CD on the EDA label, entitled The Life of the Machines, with piano works of the twentieth century by George Antheil, Conlon Nancarrow, Alexander Mossolov, and others. In September 2010, together with Judith Ingolfsson (Violin) and Leonid Gorokhov (Cello), he released a CD En hommage Simon Laks and a double – CD with chamber works by Glinka, Borodin and Shostakovich, with Breuninger Quartet. His extensive discography includes Arnold Schoenberg’s complete piano works (auris subtilis, 2001), the Complete Sonatas of Alexander Scriabin (Audite, 2008) – a highly regarded recording for which he received the Luxemburgian Excellentia Prize, among others – and a recording of the complete works for viola and piano by Henri Vieuxtemps, with violist Thomas Selditz, which was awarded the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik 2002. His recording of the two Fauré Sonatas, together with Judith Ingolfsson (Violin), was nominated for the 2017 International Classical Music Awards (ICMA). In 2017, he released, also together with Judith Ingolfsson (Violin), the CD Blues, Blanc, Rouge on the Accentus Music label, which includes the Sonatas of Ravel, Ferroud and Poulenc. This CD was nominated for the the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik 2018 and ICMA Awards 2019. His CD with the Sonatas of Rathaus and Shostakovich, released in 2020, won the Supersonic Award in Luxembourg and was nominated for the Preis der deutschen Schallplattenkritik 2021 as well as for ICMA Awards 2020. Together with Judith Ingolfsson (Violin), the most recent album with violin sonatas of Rathaus, Tiessen and Arma, was released in August 2021 on OEHMS Classics and nominated for the 2022 ICMA Awards.

In recent years, Vladimir Stoupel has also made a name for himself as a conductor. He conducts chamber operas at Konzerthaus Berlin on a regular basis, works with the Berlin Symphony Orchestra, Philharmonic State Orchestra Mainz, Czech Chamber Philharmonic, Philharmonie Neubrandenburg, the Polish Chamber Philharmonic, the Berlin Chamber Philharmonic, the Orquesta Sinfonica de Cuidad d’Oviedo, the Mendelssohn Chamber Orchestra Leipzig, the Reykjavik Chamber Orchestra, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Marseille and the Cantabria Youth Symphony Orchestra, among others. Since 2012 he regularly conducts concerts with the Brandenburg State Orchestra Frankfurt. His CD with the Opera by Weinberg Congratulations!, recorded at Konzerthaus Berlin and released in 2020, became finalist of the prestigious ICMA Awards.

A French citizen since 1985, Vladimir Stoupel currently divides his time between Berlin, Germany and Baltimore, USA. In 2022 he was awarded a French Order “Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres”.

Booklet for Rebecca Clarke - Sonatas for Violin, Viola & Piano

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