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Paganini: Caprices for solo violin, Op. 1 Nos. 1-24

Sueye Park (violin)

Paganini: Caprices for solo violin, Op. 1 Nos. 1-24
This is one of those rare cases where the quality of the instrument comes across as vividly as the quality of the playing. Quite how Sueye Park manages to effect such a perfect blend of multiple-stops,...

Paganini: Caprices for solo violin, Op. 1 Nos. 1-24

Sueye Park (violin)

Purchase product

SACD

Hybrid Multi-channel

$17.75

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Stream now Hi-RES 96 kHz, 24 bit
This is one of those rare cases where the quality of the instrument comes across as vividly as the quality of the playing. Quite how Sueye Park manages to effect such a perfect blend of multiple-stops,...

About

Niccolò Paganini is possibly the only figure in the field of classical music whose name has become a household word, equivalent with an almost supernatural excellence in any kind of human endeavour: from soccer to stock market analysis or haute cuisine. In a similar way, the last of his 24 Caprices has entered popular culture in a way that few other classical pieces have, its theme reused by musicians as diverse as Benny Goodman, Andrew Lloyd Webber and Yngwie Malmsteen.

But there is more to Paganini and his set of Caprices than the one theme, however catchy it may be. Above all, there is of course the virtuosity: throughout the collection, Paganini employs the full palette of violin technique and whereas most volumes of violin studies focus on one aspect of technique at a time, he combines them in ingenious ways. Many of the techniques he uses were of unprecedented difficulty in his own time – ricochet bowing over four strings, octave trills, endless chains of double-stops, left-hand pizzicato and artificial harmonics. But the caprices also display an unusual musical imagination and sensibility – a combination of Rossinian lightness and the sudden mood swings of the early Romantics.

Born in 2000, the young Korean violinist Sueye Park has studied in Berlin since 2009. Her first encounter with Paganini was at the age of 11, when she performed the composer’s First Violin Concerto at the Komische Oper in Berlin, and she now makes her début on disc with this challenging programme.

Contents and tracklist

No. 1 in E Major
Track length1:55
No. 2 in B Minor
Track length3:25
No. 3 in E Minor
Track length3:53
No. 4 in C Minor
Track length7:12
No. 5 in A Minor
Track length3:11
No. 6 in G Minor
Track length3:37
No. 7 in A Minor
Track length4:37
No. 8 in E-Flat Major
Track length3:05
No. 9 in E Major
Track length2:53
No. 10 in G Minor
Track length2:32
No. 11 in C Major
Track length4:13
No. 12 in A-Flat Major
Track length3:06
No. 13 in B-Flat Major
Track length2:42
No. 14 in E-Flat Major
Track length1:26
No. 15 in E Minor
Track length3:28
No. 16 in G Minor
Track length1:43
No. 17 in E-Flat Major
Track length4:08
No. 18 in C Major
Track length2:49
No. 19 in E-Flat Major
Track length3:56
No. 20 in D Major
Track length3:35
No. 21 in A Major
Track length3:29
No. 22 in F Major
Track length2:20
No. 23 in E-Flat Major
Track length4:08
No. 24 in A Minor
Track length5:07

Spotlight on this release

Awards and reviews

January 2018

This is one of those rare cases where the quality of the instrument comes across as vividly as the quality of the playing. Quite how Sueye Park manages to effect such a perfect blend of multiple-stops, especially in Caprice No. 4 (in thirds) is anyone’s guess, but in doing so she counters the cliché of Paganini as devil with an alternative images of a seducer…A most enjoyable disc, highly competitive.

February 2018

This disc is a magnificent display of technique, both musical and audio-technical, on the part of Sueye Park and her engineering team.
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