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Wydawnictwo: Haenssler
Nr katalogowy: HC 21062
Nośnik: 1 CD
Data wydania: marzec 2022
EAN: 881488210620
68,00zł
na zamówienie
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Nasze kategorie wyszukiwania

Epoka muzyczna: 20 wiek do 1960
Obszar (język): austriacki
Instrumenty: fortepian, skrzypce
Rodzaj: kwintet, kwartet

Fruhling: Piano Quintet and Quartet

Haenssler - HC 21062
Wykonawcy
Oliver Triendl, piano
Daniel Giglberger, violin
Nina Karmon, violin
Roland Glassl, viola
Floris Mijnders, cello
Piano Quintet in F sharp minor, Op. 30
Piano Quartet in D major, Op. 35
It is frankly little short of a miracle that the name of Carl Frühling is still remembered today, since we know next to nothing about him. Scant biographical notes provide a few reference points rather than an orderly résumé of his life, and a mere handful of the hundred or more works he is thought to have composed is extant today.

The main reason for his relegation to oblivion is a fact that Frühling kept secret; a fact that nevertheless had to be declared on official documents: he was Jewish. Even before the Nazis took power his religion had caused him problems, making it difficult for him to pursue a career as a composer. As a result, Frühling understandably tried to conceal his religious adherence. In 1907 he converted to Protestantism and in his CV of 1929 he stated that he was born in Vienna. The truth is however that he actually came from Lviv (the Germans called it Lemberg, and today, the city is in Ukraine), then a predominantly Jewish city, where he was born on November 28, 1868.

Frühling concluded his piano studies around 1889 and was awarded the Liszt Prize. He quickly established himself as a pianist, and was frequently in demand as a chamber musician. As a composer, however, Frühling found it difficult to make his mark. Initially, he tried to make a name with easy-listening piano works; he wrote virtuoso salon compositions such as concert waltzes, mazurkas and later, fantasias on tunes from popular operas. Although they were meant to be popular works that would sell well, they nevertheless evince a sense of proportion and cleverly thought-out pianistic writing, and are marked by humour and imagination.

Recordings: WDR Funkhaus Köln, Klaus-von-Bismarck-Saal, May 29-30, 2020 (op. 35), March 29-30, 2021 (op. 30). Floris Mijnders plays on a Francesco Goffriller cello, made in Udine in 1740.

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