The Cello Sonata Opus 19 by Sergei Rachmaninov

Rachmaninov composed the Sonata for Cello and Piano, op. 19, in the fall and early winter of 1901 for the cellist Anatoly Brandukov. Towards the end of the last movement, Rachmaninov wrote the date “November 20th”. At the very end he wrote “December 12th”, showing that he revised the ending immediately after the first performance.

The work debuted in Moscow, on December 2nd 1901, by Anatoly Brandukov, with the composer at the piano.

By mid-November the composer wrote that “my work’s going badly, and there’s not much time left. I’m depressed…” On November 30th however he sent a message to the composer Taneyev inviting him to a rehearsal. By the following January 15th he was hard at work on the final proofs of the piece: ‘I’ve found almost no mistakes’.

In later years Rachmaninov remembered his cello sonata as one of a series of pieces through which, with the help of Dr. Nikolai Dahl, after a long period of depression and inability to create, he was born again as a composer. He wrote the following:

“I felt that Dr. Dahl’s treatment had strengthened my nervous system to a miraculous degree… The joy of creating lasted the next two years, and I wrote a number of large and small pieces including the Sonata for Cello…”

Here are Daniel Trifonov, piano, and Gautier Capucon, Cello, to play this music for you:

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