Ismaël Margain, Guillaume Bellom - Mozart: Piano Four Hands (2014) [Hi-Res]

  • 27 Oct, 14:30
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Title: Mozart: Piano Four Hands
Year Of Release: 2014
Label: Aparté
Genre: Classical Piano
Quality: flac lossless / flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +Booklet
Total Time: 00:58:55
Total Size: 208 / 932 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Andante et variations en Sol Majeur, KV 501
02. Sonate en Ut Majeur, KV. 521 I. Allegro
03. Sonate en Ut Majeur, KV. 521 II. Andante
04. Sonate en Ut Majeur, KV. 521 III. Allegretto
05. Sonate en Fa Majeur, KV. 497 I. Adagio, allegro di molto
06. Sonate en Fa Majeur, KV. 497 II. Andante
07. Sonate en Fa Majeur, KV. 497 III. Allegro

Ismaël Margain, Guillaume Bellom - Mozart: Piano Four Hands (2014) [Hi-Res]


Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was one of the first to compose pieces for piano four hands. His father, Leopold, wrote in a letter of 9 July 1765: "In London Wolfgangerl wrote his first piece for four hands. Until that time no sonata for four hands had ever been composed."

The famous Salzburg family portrait painted by Johann Nepomuk della Croce in 1780-81 (Mozarteum, Salzburg) shows Wolfgang and his sister, Nannerl, playing a duet at the piano, with Leopold, violin in hand, looking on, and his wife, Anna Maria (d. 1778), included in a picture on the wall.

The three works presented here were composed in Vienna in 1786 and 1787, when the young virtuoso was about to give up his career as a pianist in order to concentrate on the composition of operas, having been stimulated by his meeting with the librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte. In the summer of 1786 he composed what is probably the most ambitious and most significant of his four-hand pieces, the Sonata in F major (KV 497). It was first performed in Vienna on 4 November 1786, four months before the Andante and Variations in G major (KV 501). His last sonata for piano four hands, in C major, KV 521, was written in May 1787, when Mozart had reached his full maturity as a composer. It is characterised by the light key of C major and the virtuosity of its two fast movements (especially the first), bright and brilliant in their elegance.


  • olga1001
  •  19:06
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Martha Argerich loves and sometimes plays K. 501 but this duet is also fantastic !
Sonatas almost there :p
Comment above is appropriate :pp
Thanks
  • gemofroe
  •  08:24
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thanks a lot