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Chopin: Piano Concerto and Scherzos
Frédéric Chopin

Felicja Blumental: piano, Innsbruck

Chopin: Piano Concerto and Scherzos

Price: € 11.95
Format: CD
Label: Brana Records
UPC: 0821158101025
Catnr: BR 0010
Release date: 01 December 2008
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Label
Brana Records
UPC
0821158101025
Catalogue number
BR 0010
Release date
01 December 2008
Album
Artist(s)
Composer(s)
EN

About the album

A prolific composer and organist, Naji Hakim is truly one of the most versatile performer-composers working today, garnering praise from his numerous organ and composition competition prizes as well as an award from Pope Benedict XVI for his musical work in benefit of the church.

This new recording with the Danish Chamber Players explores some of Hakim's works for chamber ensemble and organ, with performances from the Th. Frobenius & Sonner Organ of Vangede Kirke, Gentofte, Denmark.

When Fryderyk Chopin wrote his piano concerto in F minor, aged just 19, his two teachers, Zywny and Elsner, had already made their greatest contribution; imbuing him with a profound love and respect for Bach and Mozart, and recognising they could teach him nothing about piano performance. Chopin’s genius was fully formed by childhood.

His two concertos have remained firm favourites with pianists and audiences, the epitome of beautiful melody, yet many of his solo works, nearly all of which are mainstays of the concert program, startled his contemporaries and were frequently misinterpreted throughout 19th Century performance. His four scherzos are perfect examples of the innovation and explosive drama in his compositions that baffled even his supporters.

This contrast perhaps goes to the heart of Chopin’s. His love of opera saw early fruition in the melodic lines of the concertos, after which he saw no need to return to this form. Instead, his extraordinary natural technique gave him the power to experiment beyond any previous pianistic ideas, relentlessly pursuing the contrasting and often anguished themes in his imagination. George Sand recalled her lover spending day after day struggling with the chords of scherzo no. 3, in “this obstinate battleÖto recapture certain details of his composition.”

Chopin’s perfectionism was deliberate, both in his writing and in his obsession with the manner of performance, for above all he strove for the right effect, the essence of what would be heard, to convey his feelings. As Charles Rosen said, “[Chopin’s] music, never calculated, like much of Bach, for solitary meditation, works directly on the nerves of the listener, sometimes by the most delicate and fleeting suggestion, sometimes with an obsessive, hammered violence.”

So here are the two matchless dimensions of Chopin; the almost impossibly poignant, singing melody, and the darker, turbulent creativity of the piano’s solitary perfectionist.

Composer(s)

Frédéric Chopin

Frédéric Chopin is one of the greatest composers of the Romantic piano tradition. He was a master in making the small form great. His ballades, mazurkas, polonaises, preludes, etudes and nocturnes all belong to the most popular standard works for piano ever written.  As a child prodigy, Chopin grew up in a middle class family, who lived among the literati of Warsaw. When in 1830 the November Uprising broke out in Poland, the twenty year old Chopin stayed in Vienna. He became an exile and never returned to his mother country. He eventually settled in Paris.  He avoided public concerts, but he did like performing in small settings, such as salons and at home for his friends. This way, Chopin built a...
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Frédéric Chopin is one of the greatest composers of the Romantic piano tradition. He was a master in making the small form great. His ballades, mazurkas, polonaises, preludes, etudes and nocturnes all belong to the most popular standard works for piano ever written. As a child prodigy, Chopin grew up in a middle class family, who lived among the literati of Warsaw. When in 1830 the November Uprising broke out in Poland, the twenty year old Chopin stayed in Vienna. He became an exile and never returned to his mother country. He eventually settled in Paris. He avoided public concerts, but he did like performing in small settings, such as salons and at home for his friends. This way, Chopin built a reputation as an exceptional pianist, teacher and composer.
Chopin brought a unique synthesis between the Viennese bravado and the French/English lyric style. Even though his pieces often are technically very demanding, the focus was always on creating a lyric expression and poetic atmosphere. He invented the instrumental ballade, and brought salongenres to a higher level with his many innovations and refinements.


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