INSTRUCTION  •  INFORMATION  •  INSPIRATION

SUBSCRIBE & SAVE

Subscribe to Strings and Save!

12 issues $71.88 value

Pay just $19.95

YOUR DAILY NEWS

Newsletters

The Strings newsletter.

Yours Free!

Get the Digital Edition

For PC or tablets.
Available for iPad, Galaxy (Android) & Blackberry

Giveaway from D'Addario & Planet Waves

D'Addario & Planet Waves Giveaway

Strings Partners

Learn to improvise with Christian Howes

FREE 3-day Trial

Learn More

STAY CONNECTED

featured memberPost blogs and video, start and join discussions around your favorite topics, and meet fellow string players at the Strings Community.

Create an online profile

stringslogo_sm_leftnavimages


What do you think
of the new site?

Let us know!

The Kodaly Sonata for Solo Cello, Op. 8

More Than Just a Showcase for Flashy Cellistic Fireworks

In photographs, the Hungarian composer Zoltan Kodaly (1882–1967) is commonly depicted as a senior with a grizzled beard and the look of someone who’d gone through the 20th century’s terrible upheavals. However, the Kodaly who wrote the Solo Cello Sonata, Op. 8, in 1915 for cellist Jeno Kerpely of the Waldbauer-Kerpely Quartet (which had premiered the first four Bartok string quartets) was neither old nor grizzled. That Kodaly (pronounced k?-die) was a 33-year-old composer in the forefront, along with his colleague Bela Bartok, of the new century’s frontier. A century later, the Solo Cello Sonata has become one of the touchstones of his career and a serious rival in the genre to Bach’s Six Suites.

The young English cellist Natalie Clein’s 2010 Hyperion recording of the Kodaly is far more than just an emotionally intense, brilliant virtuoso interpretation—it represents a personal and artistic challenge. She seems to be pushing herself to the limit, making it to the finish line just ahead of her strength giving out.

Dear Visitor,

This article, "The Kodaly Sonata for Solo Cello, Op. 8," is part of the Strings Archive, which you can access with a paid site subscription.

If you have a paid subscription, you are seeing this message because you have not logged in.

What do you want to do?


Log in using my current paid subscription account.

Subscribe now and get our best offer.

Comments: 0
ALL COMMENTS
ARE FULLY MODERATED

You must be logged in to rate and comment.
Log in or Subscribe now.

SUBSCRIBE AND SAVE

Pay only $1.66 per issue!

That's a savings of 72%

Subscribe to Strings and Save
gift subscriptionArrows

90-DAY FREE ONLINE TRIAL

Get the 'Strings' digital editions and unlimited access to AllThingsStrings.com

FREE FOR 3 MONTHS!

Subscribe to 'Strings' digital

GET IT ALL

Get 'Strings' magazine and unlimited access

to AllThingsStrings.com for 12 months!

Get Strings magazine and unlimited access to AllThingsStrings.com testtest