Wydawnictwo: Haenssler
Nr katalogowy: HC 19070
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: luty 2020
EAN: 881488190700
Nr katalogowy: HC 19070
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: luty 2020
EAN: 881488190700
Beethoven: Variations Op. 35, WoO 80, 77 and Sonata Op. 111
Haenssler - HC 19070
Kompozytor
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Wykonawcy
Florian Feilmair, piano
Florian Feilmair, piano
Utwory na płycie:
15 Variations (and Fugue) in E-flat major, Op. 35 ("Eroica-Varations")
32 Variations in C Minor, WoO 80
6 Variations in G major, WoO 77
Sonata in C minor, Op. 111
32 Variations in C Minor, WoO 80
6 Variations in G major, WoO 77
Sonata in C minor, Op. 111
“Sensitivity and a wealth of nuances”, “pearly ease and aplomb” are only a few of the traits critics attributed to the young Austrian pianist Florian Feilmair. Born in 1989, he has already captured a considerable number of important prizes. He says about this recording:
“From Beethoven’s extensive oeuvre of variations I have selected four works ranging from the first to the last composition for solo piano for which Beethoven created variations on an original theme. Thus the wide-ranging Eroica Variations Op. 35 find their place alongside the compressed and downscaled Variations in C minor WoO 80 and the Variations in G major WoO 77 which were created as a piece of occasional music. The recording closes with Sonata Op. 111, whose second movement is one of the longest and most complex variation settings of the Viennese School and represents the homogeneous integration of the variation as a form within multi-movement works in Beethoven’s piano literature. Each of these four works possesses its own semantics and shows a Beethoven sparkling with creativity, wit, deep expressiveness and consummate mastery of forms, confronting the pianist with a multiplicity of technical, but also interpretative challenges.
Piano: Yamaha CFIII (1997).
“From Beethoven’s extensive oeuvre of variations I have selected four works ranging from the first to the last composition for solo piano for which Beethoven created variations on an original theme. Thus the wide-ranging Eroica Variations Op. 35 find their place alongside the compressed and downscaled Variations in C minor WoO 80 and the Variations in G major WoO 77 which were created as a piece of occasional music. The recording closes with Sonata Op. 111, whose second movement is one of the longest and most complex variation settings of the Viennese School and represents the homogeneous integration of the variation as a form within multi-movement works in Beethoven’s piano literature. Each of these four works possesses its own semantics and shows a Beethoven sparkling with creativity, wit, deep expressiveness and consummate mastery of forms, confronting the pianist with a multiplicity of technical, but also interpretative challenges.
Piano: Yamaha CFIII (1997).