Plamena Nikitassova, Les Elémens
111:25 (2 CDs)
cpo 555 481-2
Wow – these are barnstorming accounts by violin virtuoso Plamena Nikitassova of Biber’s ground-breaking Sonatas for violin and BC of 1681! Such is the dynamic approach of the soloist and her ensemble that it is easy to imagine the stunning effect these works had when Biber first launched them on the Salzburg public. They have all the spontaneity and originality we associate with Biber at his finest, and were an instant success, remaining popular in the repertoire for two centuries. Nikitassova follows instructions clearly laid out in two German treatises of the 17th century regarding her playing position and where she places the instrument – both illustrated on the cover painting on the CD but also in a photo inside of Nikitassova in performance. It looks like a risky way to hold a violin, but perhaps it contributes to the dangerous edgy qualities in these accounts. Flying through terrifying technical demands with breathtaking assurance, Nikitassova always sounds as if she is living dangerously, but the result is thrilling and surely just right for this eccentric and risky repertoire. This is the music of a new kid on the block out to impress – I was reminded of Beethoven’s opus 1 trios – and must have taken the musical scene in Salzburg by storm. Interesting that just a century later Mozart found Salzburg so stifling, clearly little of Biber’s radicalism had survived. The performers find room at the end of the programme for an anonymous Sonata in a similar vein to the Biber probably by his pupil Johann Vilsmayr, which found its way to Dresden but which was also probably composed in the musical ferment which was late 17th-century Salzburg. I must admit to being a huge ‘Beliber’, but I loved the courage and sheer chutzpah of these performances and am sure Biber would approve 100%.
D. James Ross