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Lamont Violist鈥檚 New CD Explores Often Overlooked Russian Sonatas

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Tamara Chapman

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Senior Managing Editor"

Tamara.Chapman@du.edu

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Basil Vendryes

Photo by Peter Lockley

This article appears in the winter issue of University of听Denver Magazine. Visit the听听for bonus content and to read the article in its original format.

Compared with its siblings in the violin family鈥攖he diminutive fiddle on the one hand and the voluptuous cello on the other鈥攖he viola doesn鈥檛 get nearly enough opportunities to shine.听

Enter Basil Vendryes of the Lamont School of Music. This past fall, he debuted the first of three CDs featuring little-known gems for the viola. The CD, recorded with pianist William David and titled was released in October by the Toccata Music Group, which specializes in 鈥渇orgotten music by great composers and great music by forgotten composers.鈥澨

Vendryes, who runs the viola program at Lamont and is the longtime principal violist of the Colorado Symphony Orchestra, has been championing the viola鈥檚 virtues鈥攁nd coaxing sweet harmonies from his own instrument鈥攆or nearly four decades. 鈥淲ithin the context of the orchestra, we are the support of the string section,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e are the glue that holds a lot of things together, that allows melodies to soar.鈥

The melodies certainly soar on his new CD, which features pieces from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries and from one well- and three less-known composers: Mikhail Glinka, Revol Bunin, Vissarion Shebalin and the still-prolific Ivan Sokolov. The Glinka sonata has been recorded several times, but Vendryes offers the first digital recordings of the Bunin and Shebalin sonatas. The Sokolov sonata, meanwhile, has been recorded only once before. 鈥淚 represent the second opinion on that piece,鈥 he says.听

As diverse as the compositions are, he adds, they are rooted in the Russian tradition. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a simplicity [to them],鈥 he says of the compositions. 鈥淪o much of Russian music is drawn from folk song. It鈥檚 very embedded in the culture.鈥 What鈥檚 more, much like the ever-popular Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky, the composers all ask for what Vendryes calls a 鈥渞ich, flowing, dense harmony.鈥澨

Vendryes hopes his new CD will call attention to these works and inspire other violists to perform them鈥攁nd to comb the repertoire looking for additional pieces worthy of attention.听

Lamont alumna and accomplished violist Christina Ebersohl (MM 鈥21) has already set her sights on learning the Shebalin, which now qualifies as 鈥渙ne of my all-time favorites.鈥澨

As Vendryes鈥 student and a self-described 鈥渧iola nerd,鈥 she awaited the CD with geekish glee, in part, she says, because 鈥渟oloists for viola are not as common as soloists for violin and cello. I was really excited that he [Vendryes] didn鈥檛 stick with the basic sonatas that everyone knows and loves. Some of these sonatas are really unknown.鈥澨

Bringing unknown works to life appeals to Vendryes鈥 sense of musical adventure. 听

鈥淲hen the idea of doing a [CD] actually came together, there were any number of possible projects that came to mind: a disc of encore works or short works. But I wanted to look for something that was a little unique to the catalog. I鈥檇 love to record the Brahms sonatas, but there are 25, 30 versions [already]. [I wanted] something that is interesting but not just archival.鈥澨

Were it not for the pandemic, the project might still be languishing on Vendryes鈥 to-do list. When the country shut down for the coronavirus, he recalls, 鈥淢ost everything went dark, and opportunities to perform became fewer and fewer. But there were opportunities to work on projects that had been on the back burner for many, many years.鈥澨

Although he suddenly had time to record and refine, he wasn鈥檛 quite sure how to fund a CD of obscure music. Fortunately, Ebersohl came to the rescue. She introduced Vendryes to the power of a GoFundMe site. 鈥淗e was telling me that he wasn鈥檛 100% sure [the CD] was going to happen because of the funding aspect. I was like, 鈥楴o, that can鈥檛 be a thing.鈥欌 听

鈥淚 was very reluctant,鈥 Vendryes recalls. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 consider myself to be a particularly good self-promoter or solicitor. I鈥檝e always lived in the world of the orchestra and the university where there doesn鈥檛 need to be a lot of that kind of self-promotion. But [Ebersohl] pressed a button and there it was.鈥澨

Finding a publisher for the project proved nearly as challenging as perfecting the disc. Given its fondness for forgotten music, Toccata seemed a natural fit, but, Vendryes says, 鈥済enerally they are composer-centric, so when they take on a project, it usually is all music of a single composer.鈥 But even though his project incorporated several composers, it nonetheless offered Toccata a coherent concept: sonatas from a single musical tradition.

Vendryes looks on the three-disc project as more than an homage to great works that too seldom get played. It鈥檚 also a legacy project. The next CD will feature works by Russian composer Paul Juon, and the third is expected to showcase American or British masters from the 20th and 21st centuries. By the time the set is completed, Vendryes will have a body of work to bequeath to viola nerds and perhaps even the unconverted.听

鈥淚鈥檓 not getting any younger,鈥 he says, 鈥淸and] I鈥檓 trying to share something that has a little sense of permanence with the world.鈥

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