Steven Osborne - Medtner & Rachmaninov: Piano Sonatas (2014) [HDTracks]
Artist: Steven Osborne
Title: Medtner & Rachmaninov: Piano Sonatas
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Hyperion Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24Bit/88,2kHz]
Total Time: 71:19
Total Size: 1,04 GB (d.booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Recorded: December 2012, Henry Wood Hall, London, United Kingdom.Title: Medtner & Rachmaninov: Piano Sonatas
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Hyperion Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) [24Bit/88,2kHz]
Total Time: 71:19
Total Size: 1,04 GB (d.booklet)
WebSite: Album Preview
Steven Osborne has become increasingly admired for his performances and recordings of Russian Romantic piano music, playing with a remarkable level of authority and a rare combination of technical ease, tonal lustre and idiomatic identification. Here he presents an impressive selection from two masters who lived and worked contemporaneously. Both were renowned concert pianists, and both wrote superbly for their instrument. Yet their reputations could not be more divergent. Rachmaninov utterly loved; Medtner only now becoming rehabilitated.
Medtner’s ‘Sonata Romantica’ was composed in 1930 in Paris, and first performed by the composer in Glasgow the following year. It was the twelfth of his fourteen piano sonatas. Not only its title but also the expressive content of its four movements, played without a break, make it virtually a manifesto for Medtner’s art. Apart from sonatas, Medtner’s favourite genre was the Skazka (‘Tale’). It has been pointed out that the usual English translation of ‘Fairy tale’ does not do justice to the power and depth of many of these pieces, some of which almost approach Chopin’s Ballades in their expressive scope. The two Skazki of Op 20 recorded here were composed in 1909.
In a recent performance of Rachmaninov’s Piano Sonata No 2, a great Romantic showpiece, Osborne was described by the Washington Post as ‘a master of momentum and color, a wielder of power and a sure navigator through huge landscapes: his Rachmaninov was both coherent and daringly free’.
Medtner’s ‘Sonata Romantica’ was composed in 1930 in Paris, and first performed by the composer in Glasgow the following year. It was the twelfth of his fourteen piano sonatas. Not only its title but also the expressive content of its four movements, played without a break, make it virtually a manifesto for Medtner’s art. Apart from sonatas, Medtner’s favourite genre was the Skazka (‘Tale’). It has been pointed out that the usual English translation of ‘Fairy tale’ does not do justice to the power and depth of many of these pieces, some of which almost approach Chopin’s Ballades in their expressive scope. The two Skazki of Op 20 recorded here were composed in 1909.
In a recent performance of Rachmaninov’s Piano Sonata No 2, a great Romantic showpiece, Osborne was described by the Washington Post as ‘a master of momentum and color, a wielder of power and a sure navigator through huge landscapes: his Rachmaninov was both coherent and daringly free’.
Tracklist:
Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951)
Skazki Op 20
1 Allegro con espressione[2'49]
2 Campanella: Pesante, minaccioso[3'45]
Sonata in B flat minor 'Sonata Romantica' Op 53 No 1
3 Romanza: Andantino con moto, ma sempre espressivo –[6'55]
4 Scherzo: Allegro[4'34]
5 Meditazione: Andante con moto[3'20]
6 Finale: Allegro non troppo[8'37]
Sergei Rachmaninov (1873-1943)
7 Variations on a theme of Corelli Op 42[17'48]
Piano Sonata No 2 in B flat minor Op 36
8 Allegro agitato[9'57]
9 Non allegro[7'32]
10 Allegro molto[6'42]
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Steven Osborne - piano