Description: Alfred Schnittke – author of three operas, ten symphonies as well as numerous concert and chamber works – had a complex and confusing identity. He was born in the Russian city of Engels to a mother descended from the Volga Germans (ethnic Germans recruited by Catherine the Great to settle along the Volga River in the 18th century and later deported by Stalin in 1941) and a Frankfurt-born Jewish journalist of half Lithuanian descent. Sonata for Cello and Piano No. 1 1978 Written for the remarkable Russian cellist Nathalia Gutman, the Sonata is one of Schnittke’s most frequently recorded and performed works. Much like the famous Concerto Grosso No. 1 (1977), the work is built on the idea of assembling different musical fragments, as if they were shards of a broken mirror, and ultimately integrating them into a whole. This unifying process is never fully accomplished though, leaving a scratch on the surface. Some sort of a doubt, an unspoken imperative to take the next step can be sensed. Stille Nacht 1978 Composed as a holiday greeting for Gidon Kremer, Stille Nacht is a violin-and-piano paraphrase of Franz Xaver Gruber’s familiar Christmas carol. The atmosphere of Biedermeieresque idyll (the carol is a sentimental rendition of the siciliana, a Baroque pastoral dance) is slowly entering the disenchanted reality of the 20th century: the C-sharp drone in the piano part (a devil’s interval away from the G major key), the use of bimodal (major/minor) chords, so distinctive in Schnittke’s musical fabric, the surreal string harmonics and the final glissando executed with the violin’s G string tuned down by a quarter step (a technique called scordatura) all lend an aura of eeriness to the piece. Stille Musik 1979 Stille Musik for violin and cello, dedicated to Russian musicologist Mikhail Druskin, is a study of tension and silence. The “German logic” manifests itself in that the melodic sounds of the violin and the cello can be seen as mirror images of one another. This, however, is not melodics in the traditional sense of the term: it is more of a chorale, extended in time and embellished with an emphatic turn figure, which in its first appearance bears a striking resemblance to the finale of Mahler’s Symphony No. 9. Musica nostalgica 1992 This work is an example of musical “recycling” at its best. This pretenseless minuet-like musical moment appeared for the first time in the soundtrack for Elem Klimow’s Adventures of a Dentist (1965) and was later reworked into Suite in the Old Style for violin and piano (1972), with its baroque character retained virtually intact. In the version for cello, dedicated to Mstislav Rostropovich (for whom Schnittke also wrote two monumental works: Cello Concerto No. 2 [1990] and Cello Sonata No. 2 [1994]), the poetics of distance and peculiarity is applied on a much broader scale. Yet it is the all-pervasive nostalgic naivety that dominates. Piano Trio 1992 The Trio is a reworking of Schnittke’s...