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piano-small.jpg Blue Griffin Recording is an independent recording label and full service recording company. We are located in Lansing, Michigan.
Recording engineer and producer Sergei Kvitko has completed degrees in music from Russia and the US, including Doctorate in Piano Performance from Michigan State University. (Read more...)
BGR uses the highest quality equipment to achieve the superb sound that has been praised by Gramophone ("vividly detailed, vibrant sonics"), and American Record Guide ("The recording is close to ideal, rich but clear, truthful, and immediate") among others. (Read more reviews...)
Blue Griffin is a unique label as it follows creation of the CD from beginning to end, from setting up the microphones, recording, editing and mastering, graphic design and printing, to distribution, advertising and sales. (View full Catalog...)
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CD Reviews
International Record Review compares two sets of Beethoven's Complete Works for Cello and Piano

Inernational Record Review (UK) July/August 2008 

Beethoven: Complete Works for Piano and Cello. Antonio Meneses (cello); Menahem Pressler (piano). AVIE AV2103
Beethoven: Complete Sonatas and Variations for cello and piano. Suren Bagratuni (cello); Ralph Votapek (piano). Blue Griffin Recording BGR171

Heard in concert, each of these traversals would prove thoroughly satisfying, but  judged against one another, that of Suren Bagratuni and Ralph Votapek seems superior. For one thing there is the question of sound, not merely in terms of engineering but also in the tonal quality of the performers. In the Avie set, Antonio Meneses seems comparatively distant. One is tempted to simply attribute this to microphone placement, but I suspect it goes beyond that. Compared to Bagratuni, he seems reticent and almost deferential to his partner. Passages occur where the pianist has material that is essentially decorative and complementary to the leading melodic line for cello. Yet in some of these passages, Meneses, in effect, lets Menahem Pressler take centre stage. Meneses also favours an occasional legato phrasing that runs contrary to the music’s sense. It is almost as if he felt the 83-year-old Pressler was entitled to the spotlight.
None of this, to be sure, is seriously damaging to this Avie set, but heard in the context of the more stylish Bagratuni/Votapek partnership, such shortcomings, in many respects minor, stand out. With Bagratuni and Votapek everything seems balanced, each instrument on an equal footing, each performer responding to his partner; and Bagratuni is a far more aggressive cellist. He dives into his role with a colour and vibrancy that Meneses does not approach. Aside from the characteristic ‘buzz’ that one hears from his instrument, he attacks his part with greater thrust and intensity. Indeed, he may well be a major factor in lending the music a more incisive bite than Meneses and Pressler produce.
This is not merely a question of pacing. To be sure, Bagratuni and Votapek are often marginally faster than their counterparts, and occasionally, as in the first movement of Op. 69, markedly so. Yet their sharper attacks and sometimes cleaner execution, especially from the cello, help to lend the playing a greater vitality. In the two early sonatas both performances work well, but with Bagratuni and Votapek, one gets a slightly greater sense of the young lion of a composer flexing his muscles and flashing his prowess. The distinction is even greater with the quintessentially ‘middle period’ Op. 69. Surprisingly, these distinctions are less apparent in the two borderline ‘late period’ Op.102 sonatas. In fact, the major distinction here between the two approaches involves those already cited where tempo is not the main issue. Still the edge belongs to Votapek.
       So, too, with the three ‘early period’ variations. Because Beethoven was such a towering giant in so many genres, we may sometimes forget that right from the start he was a master of this particular one, perhaps its consummate master. Each of these three works is a miniature gem — imaginative, dramatic, and concise , the set based on the glorious Handel chorus, ‘The Conqu’ring Hero Comes’, being the most impressive of three. Again Bagratuni and Votapek score over their counterparts, mainly because they produce —in all three works—greater contrast from one variation to another. In both recordings of the sonatas, all exposition repeats are observed.
If I were owning but one set of these works, my choice would be the fairly recent edition of Schiff and Perényi. It also has the (admittedly minor) virtue of including Beethoven¹s arrangement for cello and piano of his Op. 17 Horn Sonata. But these new releases may prove, for various reasons, attractive to those who collect multiple versions. Certainly there is something to be learned about performance practices from each of them.           Mortimer H. Frank

 
BBC Music Magazine Reviews "Beethoven: Complete Sonatas and Variations for Cello and Piano"

BBC Music Magazine, August 2008

Another rewarding partnership is that of Suren Bagratuni and Ralph Votapek. In their complete Beethoven Cello Sonatas and variations, Votapek’s crisp pianism perfectly complements Bagratuni’s clean, generous tone. Their approach is deft to every Beethovenian nuance, all three sets of variations particularly genial. It is easy to make the Op.5 Sonatas overblown, but the duo are united in a quest for clarity. Perhaps the earliest sonatas need a more visceral charge; but, some pinched tone aside, Op.69 is wonderful and the late sonatas conspicuously probing.  Recommended.

Beethoven: Complete Sonatas and Variations for Cello and Piano (2 CDs) Beethoven: Complete Sonatas and Variations for Cello and Piano (2 CDs) $24.99 Add to Cart
 

 
Spectral Trio in International Record Review (UK)

International Record Review (UK) July/August 2008:

 The combination of flute, oboe and piano is a rare one in chamber music and the Spectral Trio, from America, have ingeniously concocted an electric programme of trios and fleshed them out with duos by the same composers for oboe and piano, and flute and piano. They are elegantly performed, with real relish and commitment, by flautist Richard Sherman, oboist Jan Eberle and the late Kimberly Schmidt on piano.

Spectral Trio Spectral Trio $14.99 Add to Cart
 

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American Record Guide Reviews "The Votapeks: From Mozart to Piazzolla"

This is one of the most enjoyable two-piano records to come my way in a long time. Four composers with different compositional styles makes for a balanced and varied program, each one flawlessly performed.
This is very well recorded, bright and clear, and offers the opportunity to hear all of the great detail that 20 fingers can conjure up. Don’t miss it!

The Votapeks: From Mozart to Piazzolla The Votapeks: From Mozart to Piazzolla $14.99 Add to Cart
 

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ARG Compares another CD of Lyric Pieces to Blue Griffin's Release
In July/August 2008 issue of American Record Guide Nicholas Roth's traversal of Complete Lyric Pieces was mentioned in a review of another recording. Here's what Donald Vroon had to say about Blue Griffin's release:

It was handy to compare to Nicholas Roth on Blue Griffin (July/Aug 2007). Immediately ou notice the wonderful sound of the Blue Griffin release. The piano is beautiful, in tune, and never clattery or irritating but still very immediate. Rarely do we hear such balanced, beautiful piano sound. I suspect that many people who record the instrument don’t really like it.
Then you notice that the pianist has a big range of sound. He can be quite gentle and delicate and yet quite emphatic in the same piece. You notice his sense of rhythm and flow, his phrasing. He is not especially gentle or pretty (as .... is), but he has character. Nor is he slow and meditative (as ....often is); his tempos are lively but not too fast, and the music has “swing”. Notice, please, that Mr Roth does all ten sets of Lyric Pieces. If you want a complete set —and eventually you should have them all— Roth is a good choice. 

Grieg: Complete Lyric Pieces (3CDs) Grieg: Complete Lyric Pieces (3CDs) $29.99 Add to Cart
 

 
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