Sony Classical in 2024: Albums for Year-End Roundup Consideration
Sony Classical 2024 Albums for Year-End Roundup Consideration
Anastasia Kobekina: Venice
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Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos, and Yo-Yo Ma:
Beethoven for Three – Symphony No. 4 and Op. 97
GRAMMY® Nominated for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance
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Luka Faulisi: Vivaldi
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Ryuichi Sakamoto: Opus
GRAMMY® Nominated for Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album
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Bryce Dessner: Solos
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Joshua Bell, Steven Isserlis, Jeremy Denk: Mendelssohn Piano Trios
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Paul Robeson: Voice of Freedom
- The Complete Columbia, RCA, HMV, and Victor Recordings
GRAMMY® Nominated for Best Historical Album
Igor Levit: Brahms Piano Concertos & Solo Piano Opp. 116-119
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Khatia Buniatishvilli: Mozart Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23
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Yo-Yo Ma, Kathryn Stott: Merci
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Hayato Sumino: Human Universe
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Michael Tilson Thomas: The Complete CBS, RCA, and Sony Classical Recordings
Anastasia Kobekina – Venice | February 24, 2024
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“[Anastasia Kobekina’s] playing can be feverishly swift but also lithe.” “[I]t comes across as supple and sensitive on the recording.” – Olivia Hampton, NPR Morning Edition
“Interesting textures abound” “This is altogether a striking disc.” – Janet Banks, The Strad
“The programme is singular and intimate, less about virtuosic solo cello than ensemble musicianship, and all the better for it.” – Fiona Maddocks, The Guardian
Venice, which showcases many sides of Anastasia Kobekina’s artistry, draws listeners away from the lugubrious gondoliers and carnival masks that have provided our standard musical image of Venice. Instead, the album asks how much of what we’ve internalized about the iconic city is actually real. “Venice feels not just a city but an idea, a character in itself,” says the cellist; “or maybe it presents a different character to each of us. It asks questions of you, fires your imagination.” Her album, on which Kobekina is joined by a team of handpicked soloists and the Basel Chamber Orchestra, presents an embracing, personal conversation between past and present, including music from the Renaissance of Claudio Monteverdi and John Dowland to the twenty-first-century of Brian Eno and Caroline Shaw.
In reflecting on a city that exists both physically and in the imagination, Venice creates and links musical worlds. Some of the most familiar music on the album is invigorated for being both taken out of one context and placed in another. More unfamiliar music sounds strangely close-to-home. The effect is dream-like, enchanting and thought provoking – as mysterious, timeless and surprising as Venice itself.
Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos, and Yo-Yo Ma – Beethoven for Three: Symphony No. 4 and Op. 97 "Archduke" | March 15, 2024
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GRAMMY® Nominated for Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance
“This album breathes new life into the all-star format, and it made classical best-seller lists in the spring of 2024.” – James Manheim, AllMusic
“[T]his reading transmits in spades the sheer pleasure of three virtuosos with nothing left to prove simply playing together: surely the holy grail of chamber music making.”– David Threasher, The Strad
Like the artists' two previous Beethoven for Three releases, this new recording featuring Emanuel Ax, Leonidas Kavakos, and Yo-Yo Ma challenges the traditional distinction between chamber and orchestral repertoire, pairing the unforgettable "Archduke" trio with one of the composer's most internally varied symphonies, thoughtfully re-arranged for piano, violin, and cello by Shai Wosner. Beethoven for Three: Symphony No. 4 and Op. 97, “Archduke" is the latest chapter in three friends’ ongoing exploration of what Beethoven’s invention means for musicians and audiences today.
The Beethoven for Three series features three artists in pursuit of the essential elements of Beethoven's musical language, presenting Beethoven's most iconic symphonies in intimate arrangements that maintain the power and immediacy of his orchestral works. By performing the symphonies on three instruments alongside the composer’s canonical piano trios, the artists present a wealth of insight into both Beethoven and his earliest audiences.
“We all feel that being able to participate in a symphony is such a wonderful thing to do,” says Ma. “One of the things that has separated people since recording began is the categories that we put people in, in which chamber musicians, orchestra players, people who play concertos, people who do transcriptions, people who compose, people who conduct, are all viewed as separate categories with no overlap. That siloed thinking discourages actual creativity and collaboration between people. And so we feel that one of the things that is really important to do today is to actually go back to the first principles of music, the simple interaction between friends who want to do something together."
Luka Faulisi – Vivaldi | April 26, 2024
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“[Luka Faulisi’s] gift for bringing a lyrical quality to these oft-recorded works is evident throughout.” – Greg Cahill, Strings
“[Luka] Faulisi is a player of great control and attention to detail.” – Samuel Wigutow, Concerto.net
Vivaldi is the exceptional new recording of the much loved Vivaldi “Four Seasons” by rising Italian-Serbian-French violinist Luka Faulisi, taking on the piece with his bright, youthful energy. For this album, Faulisi collaborated with the excellent Polish baroque ensemble (oh!) Orkiestra Historyczna, directed by concertmaster and ensemble leader Martyna Pastuzka. The combination of Luka’s romantic sound, formed in French impressionistic repertoire, and the ensemble’s energetic and forceful take let the well-known masterpiece shine in a new light.
With “a million-dollar sound” (Pinchas Zukerman), twenty-one-year-old Luka Faulisi is one of the most promising violinists of his generation. Having started to play the violin at the age of three, Luka was a student of Boris Belkin at the Conservatorium Maastricht in the Netherlands. Over the years, through personal mentoring, several distinguished artists have influenced Luka’s musical formation. Pavel Berman describes him as an ‘an incredibly gifted virtuoso violinist’. Flautist Emmanuel Pahud praises Luka as ‘an extremely talented young man with great instrumental abilities and a strong musical expression’ and according to Jean-Jacques Kantorow Luka possesses “incredible facilities.”
Ryuichi Sakamoto – Opus | August 9, 2024 (Sony Music Masterworks)
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GRAMMY® Nominated for Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album
“One might say it was a performance for nobody — Sakamoto filmed alone in a studio, with only the crew there as audience. But it’s more correct to say it’s for us, a gift from a master.” – Alissa Wilkinson, The New York Times
“[Ryuichi Sakamoto’s] playing throughout is emotionally resonant and carefully considered, but he eschews showy displays of technical prowess in favor of an intimate depiction of the man behind the piano.” – Colin Joyce, Pitchfork
“The stillness and poise, a sonic slow-motion playing out on some subtle fractal sonic wave that never breaks makes this set startling and arresting, as quiet as it is. Meditative, too. Good for the early hours.” – Tim Cumming, The Arts Desk
In late 2022, the Japanese composer, producer, and artist Ryuichi Sakamoto sat down at the piano for a final performance. Too ill to complete an entire set at once, Opus is garnered from multiple sessions shot and recorded in Tokyo’s legendary NHK 509 Studio. The concert was filmed and recorded without an audience, directed by Sakamoto’s son Neo Sora and turned into a film Ryuichi Sakamoto | Opus, now available on The Criterion Channel. Opus was carefully curated by Sakamoto, with selections including his iconic film scores, Yellow Magic Orchestra classics, alongside pieces reflective of his eclectic career. Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence, perhaps one of his most famous melodies, and beloved works Andata, Aqua, and Trioon are represented as well as entirely new or never-before-recorded compositions. There is for Jóhann, dedicated to the late composer and Sakamoto’s friend Jóhann Jóhannsson, BB, a tribute to filmmaker Bernardo Bertolucci, and 2010219 (w/prepared piano), a previously unreleased solo prepared-piano track, are all new to Sakamoto’s vast repertoire.
Sakamoto provided a statement on the project after it was recorded, saying:
“The project was conceived as a way to record my performances – while I was still able to perform – in a way that is worth preserving for the future. In some sense, while thinking of this as my last opportunity to perform, I also felt that I was able to break new ground. Simply playing a few songs a day with a lot of concentration was all I could muster at this point in my life. Perhaps due to the exertion, I felt utterly hollow afterwards, and my condition worsened for about a month. Even so, I feel relieved that I was able to record before my death – a performance that I was satisfied with.”
Bryce Dessner – Solos | August 23, 2024
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“All the musicians on this record are exceptional soloists who have spent their lives perfecting their instrument." – Bryce Desser on NPR Morning Edition
“[On Solos, Bryce Dessner is] giving these musicians the most exposed and personal form of music” – Martin Cullingford, Gramophone
“Dessner writes idiomatically for all the instruments [on Solos]. . . and that is quite an accomplishment.” “Bryce Dessner, founder and guitarist of the indie rock band The National, has arguably had the greatest success of any of the figures who have attempted the jump from rock to classical concert music, reaching greater heights with each new release.” – James Manheim, AllMusic
Bryce Dessner’s new album Solos is a collection of unaccompanied instrumental works written by Dessner over the past few years from both his classical and scoring catalog. Solos showcases not only Dessner’s compositional flair but also the immense talent of his frequent collaborators and friends. Featured soloists include cellist Anastasia Kobekina; violinist Pekka Kuusisto; pianist Katia Labèque; harpist Lavinia Meijer; violist Nadia Sirota; percussionist Colin Currie and Dessner himself on acoustic guitar. Today’s album release also signifies the launch of an extensive partnership that will see Dessner’s classical compositions released on Sony Classical while sister label Milan Records will continue to be a home for some of his celebrated soundtracks.
Of his Sony Classical debut, Bryce Dessner says, “Writing a solo piece for me is always a great challenge and joy, as you have all the personality and talent of the player plus the physicality and resonance of the solo instrument. These pieces of mine are often written like poems, where the musical language itself dictates the form and evolution of the piece and were often opportunities for me to explore more deeply my relationship to the instruments they were composed for. They also represent in each case close collaborative relationships and friendships I have been very lucky to develop with the incredible musicians who play them. Katia, Pekka, Anastasia, Nadia, Lavinia and Colin are all exceptional artists who brought so much of their amazing talent to these recordings.”
Joshua Bell, Steven Isserlis, Jeremy Denk – Mendelssohn Piano Trios | August 30, 2024
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“[A]s a whirling blend of lyricism and drive, conversation and argument, polish and spontaneity, the performances are genuinely exciting, with such ‘oomph’ that it’s hard to tear oneself away.” – Jessica Duchen, BBC Music Magazine
Violinist Joshua Bell reunites with two of his favorite collaborating artists and friends – cellist Steven Isserlis and pianist Jeremy Denk – for Sony Classical’s new recording of the piano trios of Felix Mendelssohn. The new recording follows a unique all-Brahms collection For the Love of Brahms – released by Sony Classical in 2018 – that was also a collaboration of Bell, Isserlis and Denk. The two Mendelssohn trios – No. 1 in D Minor, Op. 49 (1839) and No. 2 in C Minor, Op. 66 (1845) – are regarded as being among the composer’s masterpieces.
Of the new Mendelssohn Piano Trio recording, Joshua Bell notes:
“Steven Isserlis and Jeremy Denk have been my most cherished chamber music partners for decades. They bring seemingly limitless imaginations and uncanny musical intelligence to every work I have had the privilege of exploring with them. It is my hope that our mutual joy for playing chamber music and, in particular, our shared deep love for the genius of Felix Mendelssohn comes through in this recording of these Piano Trios. I am forever grateful for having the opportunity to make this album.”
Paul Robeson – Voice of Freedom: The Complete Columbia, RCA, HMV, and Victor Recordings | August 30, 2024
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GRAMMY® Nominated for Best Historical Album
“[T]his comprehensive survey of his recording career stands as a testament not just to Robeson’s incomparable talents and achievements, but also to the substantial hurdles faced by black Americans generally during his lifetime.” – David Mermelstein, Wall Street Journal
“[Voice of Freedom] aims to reinstate [Paul Robeson,] this one-time cultural icon, to his rightful place.” – Michel Martin, Olivia Hampton, NPR Morning Edition
“How do you pay tribute to the towering figure of Paul Robeson, the bass-baritone who also had a major stage and film career and was a prominent labor and civil rights activist? Sony Classical’s answer is Paul Robeson: Voice of Freedom.” – Jennifer Melick, Classical Voice North America
Paul Robeson—African-American bass-baritone, stage and film actor, All-American football player, lawyer, and advocate for civil rights—was outspoken against racism, colonialism, and social injustice. Rutgers graduate, scholar of world cultures, and speaker of more than 20 languages, he worked tirelessly to break down political and racial barriers, and to build bridges between the peoples of this world. However, with the advent of the Cold War and the Red Scare following World War II, the political climate changed. Doors began to close for Robeson as concert halls and radio stations shut him out. In July 1950, the US State Department revoked the blacklisted artist’s passport thus preventing him from pursuing his successful international career as a singer and actor. But international audiences continued to honor and call out for him, and he found technologically advanced and effective ways to reach his communities all over the world.
Today, his remarkable voice and unrivaled stage presence live on in sound recordings and films. This 14-CD edition, released on Sony Classical, is the first ever release of his complete Columbia, HMV and Victor recordings from 1925 to 1947. All of Robeson’s American recordings have been meticulously restored from the original master discs and tapes, and 25 studio recordings—as well as his complete historic New York and London recitals from 1958—are presented here for the first time on CD. The richly illustrated 160-page book, with essays by Shana L. Redmond and Susan Robeson, pays tribute to a cultural icon of the 20th century.
Igor Levit – Brahms: Piano Concertos & Solo Piano Opp. 116 - 119 | October 4, 2024
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“It’s all excellent. [Igor] Levit can be ruminative and poetic, then calmly commanding and even stormy without ever sounding harsh. As always, his most remarkable quality is avoiding seeming indulgent as he conveys personality and spontaneity. Under Christian Thielemann, the Vienna Philharmonic makes wonderful sounds,” Zachary Woolfe, The New York Times
“I stand in abject admiration of [Igor] Levit’s interpretative imagination as well as (almost needless to say) his fine technique. And the orchestral performances here, from a storied venue, bring the listener back in time to the creation of timeless music that feels as vital and emotionally stirring today in our anxious digital world as it did in the 19th century.” – Jon Sobel, Blogcritics
Johannes Brahms’ two piano concertos and Levit’s recording of Brahms’s well-known solo works opp. 116–119 make up the first joint recording by Igor Levit and Christian Thielemann – a triple album – released on Sony Classical. Levit’s and Thielemann’s first meeting was quite unplanned, although both had been curious about each other for a long time. In 2015, Levit spontaneously stepped in for a colleague who had fallen ill and performed Mozart’s C major Concerto K 467 with Thielemann and the Staatskapelle Dresden in Munich. Despite an extremely short rehearsal period, the two hit it off straight away: “We have such a similar way of thinking that it is not necessary to discuss many things,” says Thielemann. And Levit adds: “When the piece begins, I simply have complete confidence in you. I know I can’t take a wrong turn. Having such unconditional trust is extraordinary.”
The two do not have to discuss individual passages – a common understanding is attained without the need for words, simply through listening and responding. Instead, they prefer to talk about performers and composers. And they are always amazed to discover how similarly they perceive so many things. Sometime after their initial meeting, it was during a walk together near Berlin that the conversation turned to Brahms – and thus they conceived the plan to record the two piano concertos as part of an upcoming Brahms cycle with Thielemann and the Vienna Philharmonic. For Levit the addition of Brahms’ beloved solo works opp. 116–119 on the album just felt right. Levit says: “Brahms’ music cannot leave you untouched. It’s just physically and emotionally not possible. Take op. 118 no. 2, for example, it’s like an arrow shot straight into your heart. It’s simply the most beautiful, touching, and tender music imaginable.”
Khatia Buniatishvilli – Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23 | October 25, 2024
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“[I]t’s [Khatia Buniatishvilli’s] command of the stage, combined with her expressive performance energy and glamourous exterior that has made her a household name in classical music.” – Gary Gerard Hamilton, Associated Press
“Buniatishvili’s ability to infuse color into the sound is fully evident.” – Tal Agam, The Classic Review
For her tenth album on Sony Classical, pianist Khatia Buniatishvili joins an iconic orchestra in performances of two cherished piano concertos by Mozart, her first ever album dedicated to the composer. After a string of releases on Sony Classical that have redefined the parameters of the classical recital album, Khatia Buniatishvili is returning to tradition with a recording of two of Mozart’s most sublime late piano concertos.
In his Piano Concertos Nos 20 and 23, Mozart takes the genre of the concerto to new heights of sophistication and communicative power. The works come from the cherished crop of late piano concertos that are among the jewels of Mozart’s output and have long formed touchstone works for great pianists and recording artists. Mozart’s music, says Buniatishvili, carries “a simplicity that makes you lost before finding yourself.” She is joined on her recording by an orchestra with a near-unrivaled pedigree in Mozart recording, the Academy of St Martin in the Fields.
Yo-Yo Ma, Kathryn Stott – Merci | October 25, 2024
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“A splendid introduction to a talented pianist” – Peter J. Rabinowitz, Gramophone
“[The programme] showcases some truly beautiful piano playing.” – Patrick Rucker, International Piano
“The album is a real gem.” – Giorgio Koukl, EarRelevant
Cellist Yo-Yo Ma and longtime collaborator and pianist Kathryn Stott collaborate on new album Merci, released on Sony Classical. Merci is a deeply personal expression of gratitude, a celebration of the powerful relationships that keep music alive. This effervescent recording is rooted in the compositions of Gabriel Fauré, whom Stott calls her “musical soulmate,” and follows the arcs of his inspiration and influence, from the creations of his teacher Camille Saint-Saëns and his friend and supporter Pauline Viardot to works by his student Nadia Boulanger and her sister, Lili. Merci is testament to the gift of friendship, to the connections among performers, between students and teachers, and across generations that make music magic.
Ma and Stott—both of whom have connections to Fauré through their respective teachers Luise Vosgerchian and Nadia Boulanger—reveal the extent of Fauré’s influence and inspiration through a recording that juxtaposes Fauré’s works for strings and piano with compositions by members of his musical family. Yo-Yo Ma says, “we musicians stand on the shoulders of those who came before us, and that we can only hope that ours will sustain those who come after.”
“The inspiration for this project stretches back to my very early years as a child at the Menuhin School, where teachers often visited from Paris,” Stott writes in the recording’s liner notes. “One of those was Nadia Boulanger. Nadia had been a student of Gabriel Fauré, and when I was 10, I had the great privilege to play Fauré’s fourth Barcarolle for her; from that moment, Fauré’s music never left my side. At the age of 10, I had found my musical soulmate.”
Hayato Sumino – Human Universe | November 1, 2024
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Human Universe is the title of the new Sony Classical recording by the Japanese musical sensation Hayato Sumino – known to his million-plus YouTube followers simply as “Cateen.” The title also describes the environment where Sumino works, where he learns, where he creates, and where he dreams. For Human Universe, Hayato Sumino mixes classical pieces with his own compositions, which draw freely on improvisation and the music he came to love while growing up – jazz, rock, electronic, the music of anime – as well as the classical canon. Separately, and as a whole, they build the atmosphere he describes.
The familiar classical pieces by Bach, Chopin, Debussy, Fauré and Ravel – and even the late Ryuichi Sakamoto’s Solari and the track Day One from Hans Zimmer’s score for the film Interstellar – offer a grounding, both in what the listener expects and what drives Sumino’s imagination as a pianist and composer. Sumino’s recording of “Twinkle Twinkle” is a witty homage – in Sumino’s own terms – to Mozart’s famous set of variations on the nursery song Ah vous dirae-je, Maman (Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star). In his original pieces, Sumino gives voice to his sophisticated keyboard technique, in creating a rich sound-world that draws on the musical experiences that influence him and his expressive imagination. His three Nocturnes – I. Pre-Rain, II. After Dawn and III. Once in a Blue Moon – form a short cycle of daily human experience in sensual, almost tactile terms.
“As a musician, as a human, I listen to all kinds of music, as one small person in this entire universe,” Sumino says. “So, I hope the audience for Human Universe will feel the same way. As if they are sitting alone in the vast space of the universe, just talking with themselves in an introspective, intimate atmosphere… I hope it will bring them something they never experienced before.”
Michael Tilson Thomas – The Complete CBS, RCA, and Sony Classical Recordings | December 6, 2024
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Michael Tilson Thomas – or MTT as he is affectionately known almost everywhere by now – has become one of the world’s best-loved musical figures and most successful recording artists, with a dozen GRAMMYs to his credit. In celebration of his 80th birthday, Sony Classical will release, for the first time, an 80-CD box set, which collects the entire discography MTT amassed for RCA, CBS and Sony Classical between 1973 and 2005.
Michael Tilson Thomas was born into an artistic family in Los Angeles in 1944. His paternal grandparents Boris and Bessie Thomashefsky were founding members of the Yiddish Theatre in America. By the age of 19, he was already conducting premières of works by Boulez, Copland, Stockhausen and Stravinsky. He assisted Boulez at the Ojai Festival in California, and in 1969 was appointed assistant conductor of the Boston Symphony under William Steinberg. He was music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic from 1971 to 1979, and principal guest conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic from 1981 to 1985. He co-founded and directed the Miami-based New World Symphony, giving its first concert in 1988. That year, he became principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra. In 1995, he assumed the career-defining post of music director of the San Francisco Symphony, turning an already top-class ensemble into America’s most boldly adventurous orchestra. Michael Tilson Thomas has been an eloquent champion of Mahler, Gershwin, Ives and Copland. He is also equally at home in the standard European repertoire, Broadway musicals and jazz; and he is a passionate, eloquent teacher.
Of what the collection means to him, Michael Tilson Thomas says, “Before and after this collection I made other recordings, but this edition represents a special period where the daring and exuberance of the musicians, the expertise of the technical team, and the support of recording companies enabled me to present a wide range of repertoire.”