On his seventh solo recording for Avie, Jeffrey Khaner, Principal Flute of the Philadelphia Orchestra, delivers virtuoso performances of Czech Flute Music of the late 19th and 20th centuries.
Jeffrey Khaner, Principal Flute of the Philadelphia Orchestra since 1990, is one of the most highly regarded flute soloists in the world. With half a dozen Avie recordings to his credit, he turns in another virtuosic performance of sonatas by Czech composers of the late 19th and 20th centuries. Dvořák’s familiar Sonatina and Martinů’s first Flute Sonata were both written during the composers’ time in America and exhibit their respective influences, in Dvořák’s case the native American and Negro spirituals that he assimilated into so many of his later works, in Martinů an overt optimism and bird song he encountered during a Massachusetts retreat. 20th century composer Jindřich Feld spent much time teaching in America; his bravura Flute Sonata of 1957 was dedicated to Jean-Pierre Rampal. Schulhoff never set foot in America but embraced jazz, a style heard throughout his Flute Sonata.
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