Sonata for violin and piano op. 21 (1945)

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Helvi Leiviskä’s Sonata for violin and piano op. 21 is a passionate and demanding chamber work reflecting her distinctive modernist style and philosophical depth.

Kenelle: Ideal for those interested in violin sonatas and compositions by women composers.

Finnish composer Helvi Leiviskä (1902-1982) created a broad-based output of orchestral works, solo songs and chamber music. Her style could be described as moderate modernism, deriving influences from multiple sources such as late Romanticism, Symbolism, Expressionism, Existentialism and Neo-Classicism. Leiviskä's output is characterised by philosophical and religious themes, images of nature and narrative structures. Many of her works focus on human existential angst and spiritual searching and growth.

The Sonata for violin and piano in G minor op. 21 by Helvi Leiviskä (1945) is a grand, passionate quest narrative. Lasting about 25 minutes, it is as demanding as a virtuoso concerto: most of its texture is like an extended cadenza, with expansive leaps, arpeggios, double stops and extensive use of the high register. The opening movement also includes syncopated pulsation, tumultuous polyrhythms reminiscent of Brahms and an edginess that harks back to Sibelius's Violin Concerto.

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Co-authorsBy (composer): Helvi Leiviskä
Preface by: Susanna Välimäki
TitleSonata for violin and piano op. 21 (1945)
Keywordsviulusonaatit, naissäveltäjät
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