Valentin Silvestrov: Bagatellen und Serenaden
Facts
| Studio | Ecm Records |
| Release Date | September 18, 2007 |
| UPC Code | 028947661788 |
| Buy this item | $17.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 0:10 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Variation 1
- Variation 2
- Variation 3
- Variation 4
- Variation 5
- Variation 6
- Variation 7
- Variation 8
- Variation 9
- Variation 10
- Variation 11
- Variation 12
- Variation 13
- Variation 2 (alternate)
- 1. Walzer des Augenblicks
- 2. Abendserenade
- 3. Augenblicke der Serenade
- 1. Movement I
- 2. Movement II
- 1. Hochzeitswalzer
- 2. Postludium
- 3. Morgenserenade
Similar CDs
| Valentin Silvestrov: Symphony No. 6 | Asturiana: Songs From Spain & Argentina | Nostalghia: Piano Works by Valentin Silvestrov | Osvaldo Golijov: Oceana | The Rest Is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century |
User Reviews
Average user review:| A bit over-rated |
| Extraordinary still, haunting, delicate music |
The piano bagatelles which begin the CD, played by the composer, began life as improvisations and they have that immediacy -- as if his fingers are searching for a path on the keyboard. He plays the most intense pianissimo I've ever heard. The music seems simple, stripped down to its essential elements, yet, as the liner notes correctly say, each of these music trifles take on "sublime insignificance."
I often listen to these pieces in bed before switching out the light. They are calming, but not quite peaceful. They draw the curtain on one day and strengthen me for the next. July 5, 2008
| No surprises. Awesome |
Martin December 8, 2007
| the still waters of time... |
After the obvious starting point in the composer's mind, Silvestrov's compositions begin on the piano. Over the years, I have found that the brief tastes of the composer himself at the keyboard that have been offered on three releases - `Four songs after Osip Mandelstam', for baritone and piano, recorded in 1986 and released WITH SILENT SONGS by both Megadisc and ECM; `Unsnaya musika 1 & 2', included with the song cycle STUFEN, recorded in 1999 and released by Magadisc; and `Hymne 2001', which appears on LEGGIERO, PESANTE, recorded in 2001 and released by ECM - to be some of the most moving music I've ever heard. Thus it was with great anticipation that I awaited the release of BAGATELLEN UND SERENADEN, ECM's newest offering of his works - over half of the album features the composer at the piano, alone, performing some of his most intimate, moving works...many of which he says have never been written down on paper. According to the notes, the composer often works on compositions in this manner, holding snippets of melody in his mind for long periods of time before putting it in writing - thus the pieces are allowed to find their own voice naturally, over time. The sense of physically plucking memories out of time is therefore strengthened by the very process through which the pieces come into being. His music has been described as `a dialogue with silence' - each note, each phrase is given a life of its own and allowed to move and breathe naturally, without artifice. More than any composer I've ever heard, living or not, Silvestrov combines elements of the avant-garde (the school in which he matured) and the neo-romantic - he does it seamlessly and without pretension, holding the melody above all else, even in the most dense and dissonant passages of his larger works. The music has a living flow unlike that of any other composer.
I'm by no means a classical music scholar - and what I'm expressing here is intended to be more on an emotional response level than anything so exacting or analytical. Hearing these piano pieces directly from the hands of the composer is a very moving experience for me - it's extremely personal and conversational, as if he's speaking through the keyboard and my soul is responding.
The other half of this CD is comprised of works for chamber orchestra, two of which - `Der Bote' (1996) and `Zwei Dialog emit Nachwort' (2001-02) feature the wonderful playing of Alexei Lubimov, long a fine, sensitive interpreter of Silvestrov's keyboard compositions. The orchestra is the Münchener Kammerorchester, under the able direction of Christoph Poppen. These are pieces of aching beauty - but one shouldn't take that to indicate that they are `fluff' by any means. Silvestrov's works are always of strong substance and intellectual depth - every note does its part to complete the effect of the whole, and nothing is left to chance or done without consideration.
As one might expect, the production on this release is superb - ECM has long been known for the highest level of audio quality. In the case of the solo piano pieces presented here, they've outdone themselves. Rather than `placing' the listener in close proximity to the performer (some engineers seem to think the listener should practically be inside the piano). Sound engineer Stephan Schellmann and producer Manfred Eicher have achieved a sonic miracle - when I listen to this recording, it's as if I'm sitting about halfway back in the recording space. The element of memory and the feeling of experiencing this music over a `quiet distance', seemingly intangible and untouchable qualities, are brilliantly conveyed by the recording.
This disc presents some of the most important and moving work by a composer whom Arvo Pärt has called `one of the greatest composers of our time' - no small bit of praise. I can heartily recommend any the ECM releases that showcase his work - and especially Bagatellen und Serenade. As an introduction to an important composer, it's a great place to start exploring.
October 16, 2007
| Sublime |
About 35 minutes of the disc is solo piano pieces performed by the composer himself.Another half is quiet chamber music dedicated to Arvo Part,Manfred Eicher and composer's wife L.Bondarenko. Essential! October 13, 2007
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