Cover Hartmann, Ravel, Sadikova

Album info

Album-Release:
2023

HRA-Release:
24.06.2025

Label: Farao Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Rebekka Hartmann, Rachmaninoff International Orchestra & Kent Nagano

Composer: Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905-1963), Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), Aziza Sadikova (1978)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Karl Amadeus Hartmann (1905 - 1963): Concerto funebre – für Violine und Streichorchester:
  • 1 Hartmann: Concerto funebre – für Violine und Streichorchester: I. Introduction 01:25
  • 2 Hartmann: Concerto funebre – für Violine und Streichorchester: II. Adagio 07:19
  • 3 Hartmann: Concerto funebre – für Violine und Streichorchester: III. Allegro di molto 07:59
  • 4 Hartmann: Concerto funebre – für Violine und Streichorchester: IV. Choral 04:00
  • Maurice Ravel (1875 - 1937): Tzigane – Rhapsodie für Violine und Orchester:
  • 5 Ravel: Tzigane – Rhapsodie für Violine und Orchester 10:23
  • Aziza Sadikova (b. 1978): Stradivari – für Violine und Orchester:
  • 6 Sadikova: Stradivari – für Violine und Orchester, 2020 16:18
  • Total Runtime 47:24

Info for Hartmann, Ravel, Sadikova



A musical journey from darkness into light: Hartmann's relentless clarity, Ravel's fiery soundscapes, and Sadikova's visionary musical language build a bridge from the past to a possible future.

Crises, divisions, nationalism – the beautiful utopia that is the potential of a united Europe is being thrown into disarray. This special recording by the Rachmaninoff International Orchestra under Kent Nagano, together with violinist Rebekka Hartmann, reveals the strength of the connection between different European cultures. The musicians have recorded three works from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries: three works that bear witness to Europe's culture and its strength, from a perspective that transcends national borders.

Karl Amadeus Hartmann's Concerto funebre from 1939 dates back to the continent’s darkest period. Hartmann does not employ a simple or brilliant language for those dark times under the Nazi terror in Germany, but interprets his time in a complex and multilayered way. But he still builds a bridge with his music, quotes a Russian revolutionary funeral march, and looks beyond his own cultural sphere.

The violin concerto Stradivari by Uzbek composer Aziza Sadikova from 2020 points in the other direc- tion. Inspired by a Soviet television film from the 1980s, her music journeys from the Italian Baroque to the present. It draws on Europe's rich cultural heritage and does not raise up any borders, discovering in the process a beautiful present and future.

Maurice Ravel had a similarly open and benevolent view of his home continent’s cultural heritage a hundred years earlier. His Tzigane is inspired by the music of the Roma. But even today, in Ravel's piece we hear less the appropriation of such music into a Western European soundscape than the fascination of a Western European for this specific kind of musical expression. Joy, affection, and the openness to a foreign culture are what characterize this piece.

Rebekka Hartmann, violin
Rachmaninoff International Orchestra
Kent Nagano, conductor



Rebekka Hartmann
begins playing the violin at the age of five with Suzuki teacher Helge Thelen. She studies in Munich with Prof. Andreas Reiner and in Los Angeles with Prof. Alice Schoenfeld. Furthermore she receives valuable inspiration from international master classes.

Rebekka Hartmann has won prizes in numerous national and international competitions, including the International Henri Marteau Violin Competition, Lichtenberg (2005), the “Pacem in Terris” competition, Bayreuth (2004) and the “Jascha Heifetz Scholarship”, USA (2002).

Her international concert activities bring her together with conductors such as Christoph Eschenbach, Esa-Pekka Salonen, Enoch zu Guttenberg and Kent Nagano. Appearances as a soloist take her throughout Europe, Asia and the USA as well as important festivals such as the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, the “Weilburger Schlosskonzerte”, and the Herrenchiemsee International Music Festival.

Her repertoire covers the entire spectrum of violin literature from the early baroque to new music. Numerous CD recordings have been released, including on the Munich label FARAO classics with solo works by Bach, Hindemith and B.A. Zimmermann. For her CD “Birth of the Violin” she receives the 2012 ECHO KLASSIK Prize for “Best Solo Recording of the Year”. In 2015, the CD “Views from Ararat” with works by Armenian and Turkish composers with her piano duo partner Margarita Oganesjan was released under the FARAO classics label. “Silhouettes”, the complete chamber music work by the Russian composer Paul Juon, also follows on Musiques Suisses together with Swiss Radio. In September 2018 “Out of the Shadow” with the Salzburg Chamber Soloists under the direction of Lavard Skou Larsen at Solo Musica.

Rebekka Hartmann is, among other things, Founder of the concert series “Musik in den Häusern auf dem Land” (Music across the countryside).

Rebekka Hartmann plays a violin by Antonio Stradivari from 1675, which was named “Hartmann Stradivari”.

Kent Nagano
is considered one of today’s outstanding conductors for both operatic and orchestral repertoire. From 2015–2025 he is General Music Director of the Hamburg State Opera and Chief Conductor of the Philharmonic State Orchestra Hamburg. He will be the next Chief conductor and Artistic Director of the Orquesta y Coro Nacionales de España (OCNE) in Madrid starting in September 2026. In addition, he is committed together with Jan Vogler as Artistic Director of the Ring project “The Wagner Cycles” of Dresdner Musikfestspiele with Dresdner Festspielorchester and Concerto Köln, and as patron of the Herrenchiemsee Festival. He has been Honorary Conductor of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin since 2006, Concerto Köln since 2019, the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal since 2021 and the Hamburg Philharmonic State Orchestra since 2023.

As a much sought-after guest conductor, Kent Nagano regularly works with leading international orchestras worldwide, including the Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestre Philharmonique Radio France, the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin, the Tonhalle Orchestra Zurich, the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, the Orchestre de l'Opéra national de Paris, the Chicago and Detroit Symphony Orchestras, the Radio Filharmonisch Orkest and the Wiener Symphoniker.

In September 2021, Kent Nagano published his second book with Berlin Verlag. In "10 Lessons of my Life", he recalls ten deeply personal encounters from which he learned important lessons, not only for his career but for his life more broadly.

In February 2024, Kent Nagano was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany by the Federal President and in June 2024 he was awarded the Order of Canada, Canada's highest civilian honor. Kent Nagano is the recipient of the 2024 Brahms Prize of the Brahms Society of Schleswig-Holstein.

Rachmaninoff International Orchestra
Composed of preeminent musicians from Eastern and Western Europe, the Rachmaninoff International Orchestra’s recordings and performances draw from the wide breadth of classical repertoire, with a focus on the Romantic and modern composers whose works have been the hallmark of Mikhail Pletnev’s celebrated interpretations. Like its namesake – composer, pianist, and conductor Sergei Rachmaninoff – the RIO is dedicated to the highest standards of performance and artistic expression.

Booklet for Hartmann, Ravel, Sadikova

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