Mark Viner - Alkan: Nocturnes, Impromptus & Zorcicos, Vol. 8 (2026)

  • 24 Mar, 14:00
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Title: Alkan: Nocturnes, Impromptus & Zorcicos, Vol. 8
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Piano Classics
Genre: Classical Piano
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
Total Time: 01:06:52
Total Size: 220 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. 1Er Nocturne, Op. 22
02. 1Er Recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 1: I. Vaghezza
03. 1Er Recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 1: II. L'amitié
04. 1Er Recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 1: III. Fantasietta alla moresca
05. 1Er Recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 1: IV. La foi
06. 2E et 3e Nocturnes, Op. 57: I. Andantino
07. 2E et 3e Nocturnes, Op. 57: II. Très-Vif
08. 3 Airs à cinq temps et 1 à sept temps, 2e recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 2: I. Andantino
09. 3 Airs à cinq temps et 1 à sept temps, 2e recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 2: II. Allegretto
10. 3 Airs à cinq temps et 1 à sept temps, 2e recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 2: III. Vivace
11. 3 Airs à cinq temps et 1 à sept temps, 2e recueil d'impromptus, Op. 32 No. 2: IV. Andante flebile
12. Le Grillon, 4e nocturne, Op. 60Bis
13. Impromptu
14. Réconciliation, petit caprice mi-parti en forme de zorcico ou air de danse basque à cinq temps, Op. 42
15. Zorcico, danse ibérienne (À 5 temps)
16. Une fusée, introduction et impromptu, Op. 55

As they have been issued, each volume in this comprehensive survey of Alkan’s piano music has been eagerly awaited by the piano press and enthusiastically reviewed. In his playing, his research and his writing, Mark Viner has become the pre-eminent modern advocate of a composer still widely misunderstood and perennially under-rated. Volume 8 of the survey is organised according to Alkan’s treatment of three genre types: the nocturne, the impromptu and the zorcico.
The chaste dignity and cool classicism of the Nocturne Op.22 (published in 1844) ally it with the aesthetic of that father of the nocturne, John Field. Published in 1857, the two Nocturnes Op.57 explore far-flung keys, with the first of them cast in a dark and mystical mood, the second taking unusually rapid flight before a prayerful and dignified close. From 1859, the fourth and final nocturne evokes the chirping of a cricket.
Op.32 No.1 is a volume of four impromptus composed in the second half of the 1840s, each piece bearing an imaginative title: 'Charm' 'Friendship' 'Faith' and, in the 'Fantasietta alla moresca', a musical snapshot of North Africa. Op.32 No.2 is another set of four Impromptus, contemporary with the first volume. Continually experimenting with musical parameters, Alkan wrote the first three of the set in quintuple time (five beats to the bar) and the fourth in septuple, sometimes evoking the mystical world of Erik Satie, some decades in advance.
The Réconciliation, petit caprice Op.42 is another piece in a tripping quintuple metre, this time explicitly evoking a Basque dance known as the zorcico (zortziko). Meanwhile the history of the Zorcico, danse ibérienne (à 5 temps), bearing no opus number, is even more convoluted than usual, as Viner explains in his own extensive booklet notes: this is the first recording to represent Alkan's original manuscript.
The volume closes with a musical firework: Une fusée, introduction et impromptu Op. 55, careening across the keyboard with a toccata-like energy before exploding in a final blaze of D major. ‘If Alkan could play it as Viner does here,’ remarked Jeremy Nicholas of a piece in Volume 6 of this survey, ‘no wonder he was the only pianist in front of whom Liszt was hesitant of playing… Lovers of transcendent pianism (superbly recorded, by the way) and high-octane bravura need not hesitate.’