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Label Challenge Classics |
UPC 0608917252224 |
Catalogue number CC 72522 |
Release date 22 March 2013 |
"4**** ["]..In a moving rendition of Beethoven's third piano concerto Valentina exposed the poetic side of this work and took the orchestra to a velvety pianissimo playing. Besides refined trills and graceful runs she shows great empathy and originality in the musical themes and played with an intensity that surprised and touched the audience.""
Leeuwarder Courant, 14-12-2015Hongaarse banden
Valentina’s grootvader emigreerde van Hongarije naar Nederland om rechten en theologie te studeren. Al op jonge leeftijd ontdekte Valentina een sterke band met zowel de traditionele Hongaarse volksmuziek als de muziek van Hongaarse componisten. De diepe emotie van deze muziek inspireerde haar om voor dit album de werken van twee van de grootste Hongaarse componisten uit te voeren: Béla Bartók en Zoltán Kodály. Het is een uitdaging om deze grandioze orkestmuziek te vertalen naar de piano en om zowel de grote als de kleine emoties van dit 20ste-eeuwse repertoire uit te beelden. Het is een schitterende verzameling van pianomuziek, deels geïnspireerd door de traditionele Hongaarse volksmuziek.Unieke en persoonlijke muzikale taal van Bartók
De Bagatelles, Opus 6, geschreven in 1908 vormden een belangrijk punt in de werken van Bartók. In deze muziek vond hij voor het eerst zijn unieke, persoonlijke muzikale taal. Dit werk dateert ook uit de tijd dat Bartók volksliederen begon te verzamelen. Tóth combineert deze Bagatelles en de Drie Volksliederen van Csík van Bartók met de Zeven Pianostukken, Opus 11, met de dansen van Marosszék van Kodály. Kodály baseerde deze dansen op de melodieën van dansmuziek die hij had verzameld in regio Marosszék in Transsylvanië, Roemenië. Hij schreef deze sprookjesachtige muziek − die tegenwoordig zelden in de concertzaal te horen is − oorspronkelijk voor piano en bewerkte deze later voor orkest.Zoltán Kodály was a Hungarian composer, born in 1905. If you would read Kodály's biography, you could only do so with increasing astonishment. Not only did he reach the honarable age of 84, throughout his whole life he remained astoundingly prolific - and with great success. Moreover, besides his work as a composer, Kodály was active as a conductor, (ethno-)musicologist, pedagogue, linguist, and philosopher. And in each of these areas, he had a pioneering role, always with exceptional passion and dedication. To name but one example: together with his friend Belá Bartók he worked on a ten volume reference guide to Hungarian music, which appeared from 1951 with each volume spanning more than a thousand pages.
Yet, Kodály gained acclaim for his compositions as well, with his Psalmus hungaricus (1923) en his opera Háry János (1926) as the pinnacles of his musical career. The core of his body of work consists of vocal music, in particular works for choir, but his instrumental music is just as impressive. His master piece Laudes Organi, written one year before his death, truly proves that Kodály's creative energy stayed with him to the bitter end.
4****
["]..In a moving rendition of Beethoven's third piano concerto Valentina exposed the poetic side of this work and took the orchestra to a velvety pianissimo playing. Besides refined trills and graceful runs she shows great empathy and originality in the musical themes and played with an intensity that surprised and touched the audience."
Leeuwarder Courant, 14-12-2015
It is beautiful how Valentina Toth makes great art from this close to folk music leaning minatures.
Klara, 19-5-2014
Geen quote
Musicalifeiten , 01-3-2014
"The 19-year-old pianist Valentina Toth brings an unconventional debut with Hungarian Horizon"
Opzij, 28-10-2013
It is wonderful that very interesting music is available on CD for the first time in a long long time
Luister, 01-9-2013
There the promising young pianist Valentina Toth will perform.
Dagblad , 23-8-2013
three star review
Luister, 25-7-2013
The unclassic, apparent vagueness was as much liberating as it was gnawing.
Luister, 22-7-2013
clear, rich in contrast and at the same time spirited and tackeling
Piano News, 01-7-2013
With “Hungarian Horizon” Valentina Tóth made a fabulous debut that takes your breath away. Now small and emotional, then grand and exuberant. Everything falls into place when you listen. Valentina takes you with her on a musical adventure that gets ever deeper and deeper everytime you listen to the cd.
Audio Freaks, 12-6-2013
"Toth uses her fantasy, has total control over the pieces she performs and achieves something that many other pianists do not achieve: her own identity combined with a strenghtening of the pieces' character."
Leeuwarder Courant, 01-6-2013
" Valentina is only at the beginning of a, in my opinion, brilliant career." Frans Schulze, Pianowereld
Pianowereld, 27-5-2013
"Add to this the very successful recording - pleasantly spacious and an incredible dynamic register width and color sophistication - and it is clear that we are dealing with a breathtaking CD, which makes us curious to follow the career of this highly remarkable talent"
www.opusklassiek.nl, 08-5-2013
Vital pieces which are beautifully performed by Valentina Tóth, which recalibrate Kodály and Bartók and make the 'Hungarian Horizon' even wider.
Music Frames, 06-5-2013
Tóth's excellent play copes well with the emotional and impulsive music from Bartók and Kodály. Much can be expected from her.
Mania Klassiek, 03-5-2013
The CD is characterized by a mature musical approach and Hans Haffmans praised the cd during radio broadcasts both on Sunday morgen (Diskotable) and during Haffmans' mooiste. That says a lot about the musical content of this record. In my opinion, Valentina is just at the beginning of a great career.
Pianowereld, 01-5-2013
"The fourteen short Bagatelles and Three folk songs by Béla Bartók and the Seven piano pieces plus the Marosszéker Dances of Zoltán Kodály are in turn reflective, attractive, emotional, impulsive and capricious."
Reformatorisch Dagblad, 26-4-2013
"Tóth breaks a lance for works that are not too well represented in the music catalogues and in which mere cosmetic and technical brilliance does not give much solace. On the contrary, it asks for internalized and integrated pure musicality without any frills."
Opusklassiek, 15-4-2013
"I have seldom heard someone who can be so absorbed in such passionate rhythms and musical ecstasy. Goose bumps guaranteed.”
De Gelderlander, 12-4-2013
"In her play she was able to expose the Hungarian soul.”
Nieuwe Dockumer Courant, 10-4-2013
"Although this music differs in many aspects from the ‘conventional’ western European music, Tóth knows exactly how to bring it close to her audience. Through a healthy combination of Frisian down-to-earthness and Hungarian temperament, she knows how to touch the right cord.”
MPodia, 10-4-2013
This being your first album, did you experience a significant difference between playing live and recording an album?
Valentina: "In a concert hall you get to play the music for your audience just once, then it's over. That's the moment you have worked towards, and either it turns out good or not. There is no do-overs. While recording a CD, everything has to be good, so re-playing certain parts is a possibility and necessity. Because of the absence of an audience you get to focus 100% on the music, which makes a recording process much more introvert. It is just you and the music. This focus and the process of re-recording lead to new ideas. Like: Yes it really ís wonderful if I choose to play it more like this. I have noticed that during the recording sessions my love for these pieces has grown because of this.
What determined you choice of repertoire?
Valentina: "The first piece I ever won a prize for - I was twelve years old - was a Bartok sonatina. My Hungarian grandfather used to sing the songs connected to this music to me. I felt that the emphasises were different than in Dutch. I asked my mom if we had any more Hungarian music on CD. That's the way I discovered I wanted to play these pieces. I used to play the Romanian dances by Bartok over and over. That music is beautiful beyond words! When I was asked to put together a CD programm, I reacted: what can I add to the music that's already out there? I soon found out that the Hungarian music suited me well."
Luister, 01-3-2013