Miku Sakakibara - Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition (2026) Hi Res

  • 13 May, 13:06
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Artist:
Title: Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibition
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: NUA Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | 24Bit/48 kHz FLAC
Total Time: 00:34:14
Total Size: 102 mb | 287 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade I
02 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: I. Gnomus
03 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade II
04 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: II. The Old Castle
05 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade III
06 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: III. The Tuileries Gardens
07 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: IV. Bydło
08 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade IV
09 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: V. Ballet of the Chickens in Their Shells
10 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: VI. Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle
11 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: Promenade V
12 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: VII. The Market-Place at Limoges
13 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: VIIIa. The Catacombs (Sepulchrum romanum)
14 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: VIIIb. Con mortuis in lingua mortua
15 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: IX. The Hut on Fowl's Legs (Baba-Yaga)
16 - Miku Sakakibara - Pictures at an Exhibition: X. The Great Gate of Kiev

This album is the second release by pianist Miku Sakakibara, featuring a program of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition. According to Sakakibara: "Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition is a work that depicts the time spent walking while viewing paintings and the internal sensations that quietly change within that process. In this recording, rather than treating each piece as a clear depiction of a scene, I placed importance on listening to the fluctuations of emotions and memories that suddenly emerge when standing before a painting. I viewed the 'Promenade' not as 'movement,' but as a time when the perspective shifts toward one's own interior, carefully weaving the sensations born within the resonance and silence. I hope that each listener’s memories and imagination will overlap, reflecting a unique exhibition within every heart."