1 CD
✓ in stock |
€ 19.95
|
Buy |
Label Signum Classics |
UPC 0635212078723 |
Catalogue number SIGCD 787 |
Release date 12 April 2024 |
Combining exceptional lyricism and insight with consummate technique, Alessio Bax is without a doubt “among the most remarkable young pianists now before the public” (Gramophone). He catapulted to prominence with First Prize wins at both the Leeds and Hamamatsu International Piano Competitions, and is now a familiar face
on five continents, not only as a recitalist and chamber musician, but also as a concerto soloist who has appeared with more than 150 orchestras, including the London Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic, New York Philharmonic and St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestras, the Boston, Dallas, Cincinnati, Sydney, and City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestras, and the NHK Symphony in Japan, collaborating with such eminent conductors as Marin Alsop, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Sir Andrew Davis, Sir Simon Rattle, Yuri Temirkanov, and Jaap van Zweden.
Since 2017, he has been the Artistic Director of the Incontri in Terra di Siena Festival, a Summer Music Festival in the Val d’Orcia region of Tuscany. He appears regularly in festivals such as Seattle, Bravo Vail, Salon-de-Provence, Le Pont in Japan, Great Lakes, Verbier, Ravinia, and Music@Menlo.
Bax constantly explores many facets of his career. He released his eleventh Signum Classics album, Italian Inspirations, whose program was also the vehicle for his solo recital debut at New York’s 92nd Street Y as well as on tour. He has also toured Spain with violinist Joshua Bell and cellist Steven Isserlis. Bax and his regular piano duo partner, Lucille Chung, gave recitals at New York’s Lincoln Center and were featured with the St. Louis Symphony and Stéphane Denève. He has also presented the complete works of Beethoven for cello and piano with cellist Paul Watkins in New York City. Further highlights of previous seasons were his debuts with the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, Ulster Orchestra Belfast, Polish Baltic Philharmonic Gdansk and his return for the fourth time for two recitals at the historic Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires festival as well as return appearances at the Seattle Chamber Music Festival and at the Bravo! Vail Music Festival with the Dallas Symphony and Fabio Luisi conducting.
Bax revisited Mozart’s K. 491 and K. 595 concertos, as heard on the recording Alessio Bax Plays Mozart, for debuts with the Boston and Melbourne Symphonies, both with Sir Andrew Davis, and with the Sydney Symphony, which he led from the keyboard. Other highlights include his Auckland Philharmonia debut, concerts in
Israel, a Japanese tour featuring dates with the Tokyo Symphony and a high-profile U.S. tour with Berlin Philharmonic principal flautist Emmanuel Pahud. Previous seasons also saw Bax make his solo recital debut at London’s Wigmore Hall, which aired live on BBC Radio 3, and gave concerts at L.A.’s Disney Hall, Washington’s Kennedy Center, and New York’s Carnegie Hall.
He was awarded an Avery Fisher Career Grant, and four years later he received both the Andrew Wolf Chamber Music Award and the Lincoln Center Award for Emerging Artists.
Bax’s celebrated Signum Classics discography includes Beethoven’s Hammerklavier and Moonlight Sonatas (a Gramophone “Editor’s Choice”); Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto, Bax & Chung, a duo disc with Lucille Chung; Alessio Bax plays Mozart, recorded with London’s Southbank Sinfonia; Alessio Bax: Scriabin & Mussorgsky (named “Recording of the Month ... and quite possibly ... of the year” by MusicWeb International); Alessio Bax plays Brahms (a Gramophone “Critics’ Choice”); Bach Transcribed and Rachmaninov: Preludes & Melodies (an American Record Guide “Critics’ Choice 2011”). Recorded for Warner Classics, his Baroque Reflections album was also a Gramophone
“Editor’s Choice.” He performed Beethoven’s Hammerklavier Sonata for Daniel Barenboim in the PBS-TV documentary Barenboim on Beethoven: Masterclass, available on DVD from EMI.
At age 14, Bax graduated with top honours from the conservatory of Bari, his hometown in Italy, and after further studies in Europe, he moved to the United States in 1994. A Steinway artist, he lives in New York City with pianist Lucille Chung and their daughter, Mila. He was invited to join the piano faculty of Boston’s New England Conservatory in 2019.
First Prize winner of the Stravinsky International
Piano Competition, Lucille Chung has been
celebrated for her “stylish and refined” performances
by Gramophone. She was born in Montreal, and
made her debut at the age of ten with Montreal
Symphony Orchestra, after which Charles Dutoit
invited her as soloist on the orchestra’s tour to
Asia. She has since performed with orchestras
around the world, including Philadelphia Orchestra,
Moscow Virtuosi, BBC National Orchestra of
Wales, Seoul Philharmonic, Dallas Symphony, and
Israel Chamber Orchestra, as well as all the major
orchestras in Canada, among them the Montreal,
Toronto, and Vancouver Symphonies and National
Arts Centre Orchestra. She has appeared with
conductors such as Krzysztof Penderecki, Vladimir
Spivakov, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, and Vasily
Petrenko. Her solo discography includes the
- 13 -
first volume of her recording of György Ligeti’s
complete piano works on the Dynamic label, as
well as Camille Saint-Saëns: Piano Transcriptions,
Mozart & Me, as well as an all-Poulenc and an
all-Liszt albums for Signum Classics.
The second volume of Chung’s Ligeti project on
the Dynamic label comprises his works for piano
four hands and two pianos, and marks the first
recorded collaboration between Bax & Chung. The
disc garnered the maximum R10 Classica from the
French magazine Répertoire and five stars from
Fono Forum in Germany. In 2006, the duo released
Saint-Saëns’s Carnival of the Animals with Fort
Worth Symphony under Miguel Harth-Bedoya,
with Michael York as narrator. Bax & Chung:
Piano Duo appeared on Signum Classics in 2013,
pairing Stravinsky’s four-hand version of his ballet
Pétrouchka with music by Brahms and Piazzolla.
Together, Bax & Chung have performed in major
festivals and concert halls around the world; in
2008 alone, they logged 20,000 miles by train
as they toured their four-hand Pétrouchka across
the far reaches of Stravinsky’s homeland. They
have appeared at international festivals including
Verbier in Switzerland; Við Djúpið in Iceland;
the opening concert of Chungmu Hall in Seoul,
Korea; the Pau Casals, Castilla y León, Torroella
de Montgrí, and Pamplona International Festivals
in Spain; the Felicja Blumental Festival in Tel Aviv;
Lübecker Kammermusikfest and Schloss Elmau in
Germany; Ottawa International Chamber Festival
in Canada; and Music@Menlo, Chamber Music
Society of Lincoln Center, Mainly Mozart, and
Bard Music Festival in the U.S.; besides giving
performances in Aruba, Barbados, China, Cyprus,
France, Guatemala, Hong Kong, Italy, Palestine,
Russia, and the United Kingdom. In recent seasons
they have performed at New York’s Lincoln Center;
with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, the Chopin
Society in Saint Paul, MN; Dumbarton Oaks series
in Washington, DC; at Italy’s Incontri in Terra di
Siena Festival, where Bax assumed the role of
Artistic Director in 2017; and at Teatro Colón in
Buenos Aires, playing Mozart’s Concerto for Two
Pianos with the Filarmónica de Buenos Aires.
After meeting at the 1997 Hamamatsu Competition,
Bax & Chung carried on a courtship by telephone
and email while on separate tours, eventually
marrying in 2004. They are also co-artistic directors
of the Joaquín Achúcarro Foundation in Dallas,
Texas, created to cultivate the legacy of the Basque
pianist and to support young pianists’ careers.
Claude Debussy was a French composer. He and Maurice Ravel were the most prominent figures associated with impressionist music, though Debussy disliked the term when applied to his compositions. He was made Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1903. He was among the most influential composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and his use of non-traditional scales and chromaticism influenced many composers who followed.
Debussy's music is noted for its sensory content and frequent usage of non-traditional tonalities. The prominent French literary style of his period was known as Symbolism, and this movement directly inspired Debussy both as a composer and as an active cultural participant
Among his most famous works are his Clair de Lune, his Three Nocturnes and his orchestral piece La Mer.