Label: Evil Penguin
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917723526
Catalog number: EPRC 0048
Releasedate: 04-11-22
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917723526
Catalog number: EPRC 0048
Releasedate: 04-11-22
- One of Belgium leading pianists, Yannick Van de Velde devotes this recording to his countrymate César Franck
- Two original works (the only ones Franck actually wrote for the piano) are coupled with two authoritative transcriptions by great pianists such as Alfred Cortot and Ignaz Friendman.
- Van de Velde enhances the singing qualities of the works and gives way to the melodic lines in what is often a tangled polyphonic writing
There were a number of influences that contributed to Franck’s distinctly personal compositional method, with two having the most substantial impact on his late style: the Austro-German tradition, particularly their notion of structural unity; and the tradition of France, the country where he lived for the vast majority of his life.
With his main purpose as a composer being to give thanks to God through his music, the coexistence of introverted spirituality and passionate outpouring provides an explicit demonstration of the divine nature of his late compositional output.
His reputation rests on a relatively small number of pieces he wrote towards the end of his life. It was not until the late 1870s where he would begin to produce what are now considered to be his masterworks. Whilst his contemporaries produced a great amount for the solo piano, César Franck completed only two large-scale works - the Prelude, Choral & Fugue and the Prelude, Aria & Finale.
It was not until 1884, and the publication of the Prelude, Choral & Fugue, that César Franck would truly begin to develop his personal voice – innovative and ground-breaking whilst at the same time reverent to the greats of the past, and displaying a spirituality both introverted and extroverted within which one can find many parallels with the late works of Beethoven. And in a century of piano music dominated by such German masters as Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann and Brahms, this work can be arguably titled the most important addition to the French piano literature since the time of Rameau.
The Prelude, Aria & Finale is no less masterful in its construction, and with it being written in September 1887 it would be the last work he would write for the instrument. The Prelude, Choral and Fugue is distinctly religious in flavour, whereas the Prelude, Aria & Finale is a more secular take of this tripartite structural plan.
The disc is completed by two authoritative trancriptions. Cortot, despite his mischievous claim that Franck’s music reflected a church-worker style (‘le côté artisan d’église’), was also an ardent admirer, championing all the major keyboard works and arranging the Violin Sonata for solo piano. Thanks to the charm and contained emotion of its melodic inspiration, the Prélude, Fugue et Variation, originally written for the organ, has always been favored by the public and has been the subject of several piano transcriptions: Van de Velde here chooses the one by the famous polish virtuoso Ignaz Friedman.
With his main purpose as a composer being to give thanks to God through his music, the coexistence of introverted spirituality and passionate outpouring provides an explicit demonstration of the divine nature of his late compositional output.
His reputation rests on a relatively small number of pieces he wrote towards the end of his life. It was not until the late 1870s where he would begin to produce what are now considered to be his masterworks. Whilst his contemporaries produced a great amount for the solo piano, César Franck completed only two large-scale works - the Prelude, Choral & Fugue and the Prelude, Aria & Finale.
It was not until 1884, and the publication of the Prelude, Choral & Fugue, that César Franck would truly begin to develop his personal voice – innovative and ground-breaking whilst at the same time reverent to the greats of the past, and displaying a spirituality both introverted and extroverted within which one can find many parallels with the late works of Beethoven. And in a century of piano music dominated by such German masters as Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann and Brahms, this work can be arguably titled the most important addition to the French piano literature since the time of Rameau.
The Prelude, Aria & Finale is no less masterful in its construction, and with it being written in September 1887 it would be the last work he would write for the instrument. The Prelude, Choral and Fugue is distinctly religious in flavour, whereas the Prelude, Aria & Finale is a more secular take of this tripartite structural plan.
The disc is completed by two authoritative trancriptions. Cortot, despite his mischievous claim that Franck’s music reflected a church-worker style (‘le côté artisan d’église’), was also an ardent admirer, championing all the major keyboard works and arranging the Violin Sonata for solo piano. Thanks to the charm and contained emotion of its melodic inspiration, the Prélude, Fugue et Variation, originally written for the organ, has always been favored by the public and has been the subject of several piano transcriptions: Van de Velde here chooses the one by the famous polish virtuoso Ignaz Friedman.
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1Prélude, choral et fugue, FWV 21I. Prelude05:03
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2Prélude, choral et fugue, FWV 21II. Choral05:16
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3Prélude, choral et fugue, FWV 21III. Fugue08:57
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4Transcr. Friedman: Prélude, fugue et variation, FWV 30I. Prélude03:53
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5Transcr. Friedman: Prélude, fugue et variation, FWV 30II. Fugue02:32
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6Transcr. Friedman: Prélude, fugue et variation, FWV 30III. Variation03:30
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7Prélude, aria et final, FWV 23I. Prélude09:23
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8Prélude, aria et final, FWV 23II. Aria05:44
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9Prélude, aria et final, FWV 23III. Final07:39
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10Transcr. Cortot: Violin Sonata in A Major, FWV 8I. Allegretto ben moderato06:23
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11Transcr. Cortot: Violin Sonata in A Major, FWV 8II. Allegro08:34
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12Transcr. Cortot: Violin Sonata in A Major, FWV 8III. Recitativo - Fantasia (Ben moderato - Largamente - Molto vivace)08:02
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13Transcr. Cortot: Violin Sonata in A Major, FWV 8IV. Allegretto poco mosso06:47