Ernö Dohnányi

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American Symphony Orchestra, Leon Botstein & Sara Cutler - Erno Dohnanyi: Concertino for Harp and Chamber Orchestra, Op. 45 - Sextet in C Major, Op. 37 - Six Pieces for Piano, Op. 41

Ernö von Dohnányi (1877-1960) 

Concertino for Harp and Chamber Orchestra
, Op. 45 (1952)
Sara Cutler, harp
The American Symphony Orchestra
Leon Botstein, conductor

Six Piano Pieces, Op. 41 (1945)
Todd Crow, piano

Sextet in C Major, Op. 37 (1935) 
Erica Kiesewetter, violin
Karen Dreyfus, viola
Eugene Moye, cello
Laura Flax, clarinet 
Jeffrey Lang, horn
Diane Walsh, piano


BRIDGE 9160

Ernö Dohnányi, composer, pianist, and conductor, was an important transitional figure between the music of the 19th and 20th centuries.  A central figure in Hungarian musical life for many decades, Dohnányi  resigned his post as director of the Academy of Music in Budapest as a protest against the anti-Jewish legislations of 1941.  He ultimately migrated to the USA, where he became professor of music at Florida State University and continued to teach until his death.  As a composer, Dohnányi remained unshakably committed to the musical universe of Brahms, whom he had met as a young man.  Dohnányi enriched his essentially conservative stylistic predilection with wit, elegance, structural sophistication and a profound understanding of the soul of musical instruments.  Dohnányi wrote his "Harp Concertino" in  Tallahassee in 1952.  Its lush post-Romantic idiom is tinged with more than a few touches of French music of the past.  The "Six Pieces for Piano" were written just after Dohnányi left Hungary, never to return.  Elegant virtuosity, spicy harmonies, and intimate lyricism remain hallmarks of these rarely heard works.  The virtuosic "Sextet in C Major", composed in Budapest, is Dohnányi's final chamber composition (not counting two short works for flute written shortly before his death).  Throughout the work, a tritone ‘leitmotiv' clashes with themes of an overtly lyrical nature.  Playful, and jazzy rhythms are frequently incorporated into this wildly dramatic and inspired composition.