Divine Art: DDA25067

A Night at the Opera

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A Night at the Opera

0809730506727

DDA25067

A Night at the Opera


Busoni:

Sonatina No. 6 (Chamber Fantasy on Themes from Bizet's Carmen)

Chopin:

Variations on Mozart's 'La ci darem la mano' in B flat major, Op. 2

Gluck:

Melodie from the opera Orfeo ed Euridice

arr. Sgambati

Grainger:

Ramble on Love (from Der Rosenkavalier)

Grünfeld:

Soirée de Vienne, Op. 56: Concert Paraphrase on Johann Strauss's Waltz Motives from Die Fledermaus

Liszt:

Concert Paraphrase on Rigoletto, S.434 after Verdi's opera

Réminiscences de Norma - Grande Fantaisie

Mendelssohn:

Fantasia on "The Last Rose of Summer", Op. 15

ater used in Martha by Flotow

Rimsky Korsakov:

Flight of the Bumble Bee

arr. Rachmaninov

Wagner:

Isoldes Liebestod

arr. Liszt


Anthony Goldstone (piano)

Anthony Goldstone here presents a collection of paraphrases, transcriptions and variations from opera for solo piano. The medium of opera has been the vehicle for some of the most passionate music, and the most beautiful melodies, ever written. Pianists are no more immune from passion than anyone else, and – despite the piano’s percussive method of sound production, or it may be because of it – they have been eager to accept, from whatever source, every opportunity to render a wonderful tune. It is no surprise that pianist-composers have plundered the treasures of opera for the benefit of their fellows. All melodies ultimately spring from the voice, and, no matter how ornate the costumes in which ever more adventurous composer-virtuosos have cloaked them, the challenge for the executant is to phrase them in such a way as not to invite detrimental comparison with the “real thing”. Sometimes composers have distilled an opera into a manageable length for a piano piece; sometimes they have shamelessly cherry-picked. The comment attributed to Rossini regarding Wagner’s operas – that they contain fine moments but awful quarter-hours – is perhaps extreme, but it is self-evident that in any extended theatre piece there will be comparative highlights and longueurs. Moreover, at the piano the often wearisome plots can be ignored. Anthony Goldstone is recognised as one of Britain’s most respected pianists. Goldstone’s completions and realisations of several works by Schubert and Mozart have been greeted with enthusiasm by musicologists and listeners alike.

“…Goldstone's accounts generally stand up well to the competition - a buoyant Rigoletto paraphrase, for example, and a keenly detailed and dramatic Carmen Chamber Fantasy.” Gramophone Magazine, Awards Issue 2008

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