Welkom bij Bergmann Muziek

La Leggierezza

La Leggierezza

Yang Yang Cai

€ 19.95 In winkelwagen

Artiesten & componisten

Yang Yang Cai Franz Liszt

Over het product

Type: CD
Label: Challenge Classics
EAN: 0608917292824
Catalogusnummer: CC 72928
Uitgebracht: 01-23

Over het album

For Liszt’s biographer Derek Watson - “The music reflects the man in its range from the ascetic to the sumptuous, from the trivial and profane to the sublime and spiritual.” Alfred Brendel, another Liszt-admirer, has remarked: “For Liszt … the piano was an object to be transformed into an orchestra, turned into the elements, lifted into the spheres.” In addition to this keyboard-related revolution, Liszt's harmonic language deeply influenced Wagner, while his pioneering development of the symphonic poem genre also contributed to his far-reaching influence.
 
Liszt's Trois Études de Concert S 144 (Trois caprices poétiques in the 2nd edition) date from 1848.
The origin of their individual titles (Lamento, La Leggierezza Sospiro) which were added later, is something of a mystery, but they have proved to be generally popular and evidence suggests that Liszt himself was happy with them.
 
Liszt was only twenty-two when he composed the three Apparitions. These innovative, surprisingly forward-looking pieces are among the most important of his early works, imbued with an otherwordly spirit, suspended and dream-like.
 
Liszt composed his Six Grandes Études de Paganini in 1851. He had first heard Paganini play in 1831 and, in common with many other composers and performers, was bewitched – so much so that he was inspired to emulate his astonishing degree of technical mastery in extending the musical expression of his own instrument. No 2 in E flat major (marked Andantino capriccioso) is based on the seventeenth of Paganini's solo violin Caprices, but Liszt superbly recreates this music in pianistic terms.
 
The sparkling Valse-Impromptu in A flat major (c1850) is Liszt at his most elegant and charming.
 
Du Bist die Ruh' is one of twelve Schubert lieder which Liszt transcribed in 1838. Here Liszt writes a decorative, widely-spaced left hand part but preserves the calm, dignified mood of the song.
 
The outlandishly demanding Transcendental Études date from 1851. Chasse-neige is the final Étude No 12 in B flat minor. Busoni described it as “the noblest example, perhaps, amongst all music of a poetising nature ... a sublime and steady fall of snow which gradually buries landscape and people.”

Ook interessant

Nieuwsbrief

Op de hoogte blijven van acties? Kortingen of nieuwe releases? Schrijf u in voor onze nieuwsbrief.

Bij u in de buurt

Geen optredens bij u in de buurt bekend!