Label: CAvi
Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085534517
Catalog number: AVI 8553451
Releasedate: 04-03-16
Format: CD
Barcode: 4260085534517
Catalog number: AVI 8553451
Releasedate: 04-03-16
- One full disc Sibelius, one full disc Grieg, one full disc Scriabin
- Live recordings from one of the greatest Piano Festival on the European Continent – in retrospect 2015
- Young and partially known and acclaimed pianist such as Benjamin Moser, Andrey Gugnin
- 3 CD disc of high value for Nordic Music lovers
- Live recordings from one of the greatest Piano Festival on the European Continent – in retrospect 2015
- Young and partially known and acclaimed pianist such as Benjamin Moser, Andrey Gugnin
- 3 CD disc of high value for Nordic Music lovers
NORDIC and…..
In 2015 we devoted a great number of Festival recital programmes to our focus on two composer anniversaries in particular: Jean Sibelius (Finland) and Alexander Scriabin (Russia). To complete our survey of “the Nordic tone”, Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg could not be left out, of course! Our annual CD of performance highlights from 2015 reflects that choice of repertoire, with the title “Sibelius, Grieg and Scriabin”.
CD No. 1 is devoted entirely to the piano music of Jean Sibelius. Finnish pianist Henri Sigfridsson interprets the Six Impromptus, op. 5 and the Five Pieces, op. 75: an “arborescent suite” that reflects Sibelius’s profound connection with nature by portraying different species of trees. Rudi Spring, a proven connoisseur of Sibelius’s piano music, then proposes a selection of brief piano miniatures, followed by Andrey Gugnin, the winner of the Gina Bachauer Competition in 2014. With Gugnin’s rendition of the Five Piano Pieces, op. 85 – a “flower suite” – we return to the subject matter of Op. 75 featured at the beginning of this CD: nature.Ya-Fei Chuang and Robert Levin have been faithful to the Festival for many years. Thanks to their immense command of repertoire, they are often featured in our set of annual CD’s.
On the second one in this boxed set, devoted to works by Edvard Grieg, the duo plays the Norwegian Dances for Piano Four Hands, op. 35, clearly inspired by the “Nordic tone” of Grieg’s home country. Pianist Benjamin Moser has also been featured in previous boxed sets of the Edition Klavier-Festival Ruhr. On this occasion, he performs a selection of Grieg’s Lyric Pieces, “an intimate slice of life”, as Grieg called them. Joachim Carr, on the other hand, is featured in our recording series for the first time. He also presents a selection of Lyric Pieces, along with the only piano sonata Grieg ever wrote – at the young age of twenty-two. The third CD in our annual boxed set for 2015 is exclusively devoted to the piano output of Alexander Scriabin. He wrote his Three Pieces, op. 45 in 1904, a time in his life when he was devoting greater interest to literary and philosophical ideas. These are contrasted with the Five Preludes, op. 74, the last work he completed: in 1914, just a few months before
dying suddenly and unexpectedly from septicaemia. Both works are featured here in renditions by young Russian pianist Andrey Gugnin. Scriabin attempted to renew and further develop the sonata genre: already in his first four piano sonatas, the movements have very close thematic connections, as in Sonata No. 3 in F Sharp Minor, op. 23, performed here by Chi Ho Han, and Sonata No. 4 in F Sharp Major, op. 30, performed by Pavel Kolesnikov. A laureate of the renowned Canadian Honens competition, Kolesnikov is also present on this CD with Scriabin’s Poème “Vers la flamme” in E Major, op. 72. The Russian composer also composed Etudes throughout his entire life: thus, on this CD, we feature Scriabin’s Etudes in D Sharp (op. 8/12), C Sharp Minor (op. 2/1) and G Sharp Minor (op. 8/9), in renditions by Benjamin Moser and Dudana Mazmanishvili. Moser also plays one of Scriabin’s most impressive piano pieces, the Fantaisie in B Minor, op. 28.
In 2015 we devoted a great number of Festival recital programmes to our focus on two composer anniversaries in particular: Jean Sibelius (Finland) and Alexander Scriabin (Russia). To complete our survey of “the Nordic tone”, Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg could not be left out, of course! Our annual CD of performance highlights from 2015 reflects that choice of repertoire, with the title “Sibelius, Grieg and Scriabin”.
CD No. 1 is devoted entirely to the piano music of Jean Sibelius. Finnish pianist Henri Sigfridsson interprets the Six Impromptus, op. 5 and the Five Pieces, op. 75: an “arborescent suite” that reflects Sibelius’s profound connection with nature by portraying different species of trees. Rudi Spring, a proven connoisseur of Sibelius’s piano music, then proposes a selection of brief piano miniatures, followed by Andrey Gugnin, the winner of the Gina Bachauer Competition in 2014. With Gugnin’s rendition of the Five Piano Pieces, op. 85 – a “flower suite” – we return to the subject matter of Op. 75 featured at the beginning of this CD: nature.Ya-Fei Chuang and Robert Levin have been faithful to the Festival for many years. Thanks to their immense command of repertoire, they are often featured in our set of annual CD’s.
On the second one in this boxed set, devoted to works by Edvard Grieg, the duo plays the Norwegian Dances for Piano Four Hands, op. 35, clearly inspired by the “Nordic tone” of Grieg’s home country. Pianist Benjamin Moser has also been featured in previous boxed sets of the Edition Klavier-Festival Ruhr. On this occasion, he performs a selection of Grieg’s Lyric Pieces, “an intimate slice of life”, as Grieg called them. Joachim Carr, on the other hand, is featured in our recording series for the first time. He also presents a selection of Lyric Pieces, along with the only piano sonata Grieg ever wrote – at the young age of twenty-two. The third CD in our annual boxed set for 2015 is exclusively devoted to the piano output of Alexander Scriabin. He wrote his Three Pieces, op. 45 in 1904, a time in his life when he was devoting greater interest to literary and philosophical ideas. These are contrasted with the Five Preludes, op. 74, the last work he completed: in 1914, just a few months before
dying suddenly and unexpectedly from septicaemia. Both works are featured here in renditions by young Russian pianist Andrey Gugnin. Scriabin attempted to renew and further develop the sonata genre: already in his first four piano sonatas, the movements have very close thematic connections, as in Sonata No. 3 in F Sharp Minor, op. 23, performed here by Chi Ho Han, and Sonata No. 4 in F Sharp Major, op. 30, performed by Pavel Kolesnikov. A laureate of the renowned Canadian Honens competition, Kolesnikov is also present on this CD with Scriabin’s Poème “Vers la flamme” in E Major, op. 72. The Russian composer also composed Etudes throughout his entire life: thus, on this CD, we feature Scriabin’s Etudes in D Sharp (op. 8/12), C Sharp Minor (op. 2/1) and G Sharp Minor (op. 8/9), in renditions by Benjamin Moser and Dudana Mazmanishvili. Moser also plays one of Scriabin’s most impressive piano pieces, the Fantaisie in B Minor, op. 28.
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1Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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1Norwegische Tänze für Klavier zu vier Händen op. 35
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1Sonate Nr. 3 in fis-Moll op. 23
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2Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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2Norwegische Tänze für Klavier zu vier Händen op. 35
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2Sonate Nr. 3 in fis-Moll op. 23
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3Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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3Norwegische Tänze für Klavier zu vier Händen op. 35
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3Sonate Nr. 3 in fis-Moll op. 23
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4Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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4Norwegische Tänze für Klavier zu vier Händen op. 35
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4Sonate Nr. 3 in fis-Moll op. 23
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5Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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5Aus dem Volksleben op. 19
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5Sonate Nr. 4 in Fis-Dur op. 30
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6Sechs Impromptus op. 5
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6Aus dem Volksleben op. 19
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6Poème „Vers la flamme“ in E-Dur op. 72
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7Fünf Stücke op. 75 („Bäume“)
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7Aus dem Volksleben op. 19
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7Fantasie in h-Moll op. 28
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8Fünf Stücke op. 75 („Bäume“)
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8Sonate in e-Moll op. 7
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8Etüde in dis-Moll op. 8/12
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9Fünf Stücke op. 75 („Bäume“)
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9Sonate in e-Moll op. 7
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9Etüde in cis-Moll op. 2/1
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10Fünf Stücke op. 75 („Bäume“)
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10Sonate in e-Moll op. 7
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10Etüde in gis-Moll op. 8/9
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11Fünf Stücke op. 75 („Bäume“)
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11Sonate in e-Moll op. 7
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11Drei Stücke op. 45
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12Fünf Stücke op. 85 („Blumen“)
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12Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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12Drei Stücke op. 45
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13Fünf Stücke op. 85 („Blumen“)
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13Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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13Drei Stücke op. 45
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14Fünf Stücke op. 85 („Blumen“)
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14Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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14Fünf Préludes op. 74
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15Fünf Stücke op. 85 („Blumen“)
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15Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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15Fünf Préludes op. 74
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16Fünf Stücke op. 85 („Blumen“)
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16Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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16Fünf Préludes op. 74
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17Zwei Rondinos op. 68
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17Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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17Fünf Préludes op. 74
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18Zwei Rondinos op. 68
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18Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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18Fünf Préludes op. 74
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19Sonatine Nr. 1 in fis-Moll op. 67
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19Lyrische Stücke (Auswahl)
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20Sonatine Nr. 1 in fis-Moll op. 67
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21Sonatine Nr. 1 in fis-Moll op. 67
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22Valsette op. 40/1
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23Humoreske op. 97/1
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24Linnaea op. 76/11
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25Pensée mélodique op. 40/6
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26Harlequinade op. 76/13
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27Humoreske op. 97/6
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28The Village Church op. 103/1
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29Surusoitto (Trauergeläut) op. 111 B, Klavierbearbeitung des Orgelstücks
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30Fünf Skizzen op. 114
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31Fünf Skizzen op. 114
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32Fünf Skizzen op. 114
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33Fünf Skizzen op. 114
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34Fünf Skizzen op. 114