Kirsten Johnson - Expressions: Piano Music by Kirsten Johnson (2024) [Hi-Res]

  • 06 Aug, 17:07
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Expressions: Piano Music by Kirsten Johnson
Year Of Release: 2024
Label: Centaur Records, Inc.
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:14:04
Total Size: 178 MB / 1.11 GB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Johnson: Applicazione Addolcita No. 13 (5:30)
2. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: I Expression No. 1, Dark (2:01)
3. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: II Expression No. 2, Whimsical (1:48)
4. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: III Expression No. 3, Presto: Too many things happening at once, can't cope and can't keep up... (1:42)
5. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: IV Expression No. 4, Slow in time and space (2:56)
6. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: V Expression No. 5, Moving on different planes, in seemingly different universes (2:24)
7. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: VI Expression No. 6, Fleeting (1:23)
8. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: VII Expression No. 7, Quizzical (1:31)
9. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: VIII Expression No. 8, Leisurely (1:02)
10. Johnson: 9 Expressions for Piano: IX Expression No. 9, Fast (1:28)
11. Johnson: Nocturne Semplice (6:21)
12. Johnson: North Texas (a scherzo for piano) (6:35)
13. Johnson: Reaching out…where are you? (5:39)
14. Johnson: November Wind (3:22)
15. Johnson: In the Beginning (4:39)
16. Johnson: Rondo (2:05)
17. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: I One note, C- Solitary (1:37)
18. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: II Two notes, C and D – Not alone anymore…. (2:39)
19. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: III Three notes- Call (1:49)
20. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: IV Four Notes - Gigue (2:14)
21. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: V Five Notes - Waltz (2:32)
22. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: VI Six Notes- Improvisation (2:15)
23. Johnson: Seven Diatonic Preludes: VII Seven Notes- Poem (5:12)
24. Johnson: Elegy (5:30)

I remember making up songs and melodies from an early age, but never actively pursued composition until I was a graduate student, with music theory as my minor. Some of the works on this disc date from that period. I focused on my career as a pianist, but in recent years composition has taken much more of my time and has been a great joy.

The opening piece is one of my most recent, inspired by my recording of Benjamin Carr’s (1768-1831) complete piano works. He wrote a set of Applicazione Addolcita, subtitled Twelve Airs and a Ground, with Variations or arranged as Rondos, Op.6 (1809). These all begin with a short prelude before the rondo or, in some cases, variations. My piece follows Carr’s set of twelve as Applicazione Addolcita No. 13 (2021). Opening with a quiet prelude in A minor, the “Rondo: Toccata” ensues, with octaves reminiscent of Liszt’s Erlkönig underpinning the theme. Two sections are interspersed: the first marked ‘Jocular’, with a rising tune in the left hand; the second, a “Waltz macabre”.

Inspired by Prokofiev’s Visions fugitives, 9 Expressions for Piano (2021) was finished during Covid-19 lockdown, though the opening piece was written in 1990. Expression No. 1 “Dark” is based on an octatonic scale and the Fibonacci sequence. Expression No. 2 “Whimsical” is a bitonal bittersweet waltz, with the left hand in G major and the right in C# minor. Expression No. 3 “Presto: Too many things happening at once, can’t cope and can’t keep up….” utilizes all three octatonic scales. Opening in 2/4, the right hand has fast groups of five figuration against the melody in the left. After building to a climax, the piece starts again but is now expanded in 3/4 time, culminating in a contrary motion scale juxtaposing the second and third octatonic scales. Expression No. 4 “Slow in time and space” is a welcome respite, using parallel seventh chords as a backdrop for a melody which reminds me of empty streets on a cold winter’s night. Expression No. 5 “Moving on different planes, in seemingly different universes” is contrapuntal, with the opening melody developed in a four-voice fugue. For Expression No. 6 “Fleeting”, I set out to write a piece purely using dyads in seconds, partly inspired by the passagework at the end of Prokofiev’s third piano concerto. The chromatic melody for Expression No. 7 “Quizzical” was taken down in a sketchbook after my daughter asked me a question, and I heard in her inflection this musical line. I always think of her when I play this piece. Expression No. 8 “Leisurely” is based on a tone row and inspired by the first piece of Schoenberg’s Op. 19. Expression No. 9 “Fast”, which uses quartal harmonies and patterns, brings this set to a close.

Over the years I have found solace in the wonderful Chopin nocturnes I have performed, and my technique and writing has been influenced by learning all twenty-seven Chopin études. Nocturne Semplice (2016) came as a simple melody, one that still moves me every time I play it, with the development of the line in 6ths reflecting Chopin’s Étude, Op 25, No.8.

The next three pieces stand alone, but can also be grouped as a set, “Seasons of Life”.

North Texas (a scherzo for piano) was mostly written in 1989 during my time at the University of North Texas College of Music but completed in 2011. I sketched the opening melody of Reaching out…where are you? in 1996, with the working title “Sadness”, only writing the full piece in 2016. It is introspective, with rich harmonies and three against two patterns supporting the melody above. November Wind (2011) came as I sat down to the piano one day – the opening figuration accompanies a robust melody, followed by a second melody, and then the inversion of that second melody. The material develops in both hands, as the wind swirls and blows.