Galynin: Sonata Triad |
This page lists all recordings of Sonata Triad, by German Galynin (1922-66) on CD. Generally, more recent CDs are listed first, but with priority given to items that are in stock. |
Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Galynin - Piano Music Volume One
The Russian composer Herman Galynin (1922–66) studied at the Moscow Conservatory with
Shostakovich and Myaskovsky, producing a flow of brilliant compositions while still a student. They fuse influences from his teachers – Shostakovich’s wit and irony and Myaskovsky’s lyrical
introspection – with Prokofiev’s rhythmic energy to produce a language very much his own. Although he was dogged by ill fortune (he was an orphan) and ill health, Galynin’s music expresses
a defiant will to live with verve and humour. Herman Hermanovich Galynin (1922–66) met with his share of bad fortune, not least crippling illness
and the hostile political climate of the Stalin regime. Galynin was born on 30 March 1922 in the industrial city of Tula, around 100 miles south of Moscow.
Orphaned at a young age, after surviving on his own for some time he was fostered in the
orphanage at Tula only 14 years old, where his musical talents emerged. His musical gifts were held in the highest esteem by Dmitri Shostakovich and Nikolai Myaskovsky, his
teachers at the Moscow Conservatory. Many of Galynin’s freshest works date from his student years at the Conservatory. Considered to be one of the casualties Stalin’s post-war cultural purges, Galynin was deeply
affected by the dismissal of Shostakovich for harbouring ‘formalist’ tendencies. As a former pupil of Shostakovich, he was reassigned to a different teacher and asked to compose works to
demonstrate his ‘re-education’ after having been ‘contaminated’ by Shostakovich. What remains most compelling about Galynin’s music is the highly personal quality of his lyricism, his
ability to expand his material in fresh and fertile directions and a phenomenal rhythmic verve. All
this is in evidence in his music for solo piano, of which this recording offers the first instalment of a
comprehensive survey. “Olga Solovieva plays with fiery conviction throughout, and the recording quality and documentation testify to admirable team-effort.” Gramophone Magazine, 2008 Awards Issue | 
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