Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Yundi: Live In Beijing
YUNDI - Live In Beijing, a spectacular concert in the extraordinary new venue of the National Centre of the Performing Arts in Beijing. Here he gives a live recital, recorded for EMI Classics, of works by Chopin, including his great Sonata no.2. His encores are Chinese works which have been incredibly popular in his recitals around the world. Yundi is famed throughout his homeland since his win in the Chopin Competition in Warsaw in 2000, where he was the first Chinese pianist to win the competition, as well as the youngest ever winner. The first live performance available commercially globally from Beijing’s latest performing arts venue A unique live recording of one of the great young Chopin pianists, performed in his homeland where he is a superstar. This recording will capture the energy and thrill of a very special live performance in a sensational new venue. Since the competition that catapulted Yundi onto the international stage, his recitals and appearances with orchestras in Europe, Asia and the United States have been hailed by critics extolling his precise, crystalline technique, keyboard fluidity and boundless enthusiasm. His personality and artistry appeal to audiences of all ages and he is an icon in his native China, where he has inspired millions of young people, who refer to him as the "Prince of the Piano." “In many respects the opening work - and Andante spianato and Grand Polonaise - shows him at his finest, with dizzying passagework, fine filigree and a high glitter content (entirely appropriate in this early piece). Predictably, the audience love it.” Gramophone Magazine, April 2011 | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Chopin - The Complete Mazurkas Volume 1
Nineteenth-century works inspired by folk music come in many forms. As far as piano music is concerned, one thinks of such pieces as the arrangements of popular tunes that furnish Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies and Brahms’ Hungarian Dances. But Chopin’s mazurkas are quite different in that a popular folk tradition, with the use of original thematic material, is developed and shaped by the composer’s invention. The mazurka takes its name from the area of Mazovia around Warsaw, acquiring its status as a national and stylized dance form in the late eighteenth/early nineteenth century (long after the polonaise had done so). The term ‘mazurka’ is really a generic title for many regional dances that share similar characteristics, most notably the mazur, oberek and kujawiak. The features common to all are triple time, the strongly accented second or third beat (accompanied by a tap of the heel), and a dotted rhythm. Some of these regional variations are fast and wild (like the obereks), others are tinged with melancholy. Chopin’s earliest essays in the form are the two mazurkas in B flat major and G major composed and published in Warsaw in 1826; the very last work he completed was the Mazurka in G minor Op 67 No 2, published in 1855. (See volume 2 for these.) In all, Chopin composed some 57 mazurkas (more if doubtful and spurious works are included) of which 41 were published during his lifetime in groups of three, four or five. The chronology of their composition is sometimes unclear. In some cases ideas Chopin had improvised waited some time before being committed to paper; further revisions and second thoughts meant additional delays before publication. Briefly, the nine mazurkas of Opp 6 and 7 were composed in Vienna in 1830 shortly after his final departure from Warsaw. The thirty-two mazurkas contained in Opp 17 to 63 were composed and published at fairly regular intervals between 1833 and 1847. The eight mazurkas of Opp 67 and 68, instructed by the composer to be destroyed but published posthumously by Julian Fontana, were written at various times between 1827 (Op 68 No 2) and 1849 (Op 67 No 2). A further thirteen have no opus numbers, mainly early works either published separately while Chopin was still alive or after his death—the one in A flat major, for example, composed in 1834 did not appear in print until 1930. The first two sets on this volume, while not as distinguished as some of the later ones, nevertheless contain many of the characteristic devices Chopin was to use frequently: the triplet figure that opens Op 6 No 1 in F sharp minor, for instance, and the drone bass of No 2 in C sharp minor and No 3 in E major, which lends a rustic flavour to the music. This set, composed between 1830 and 1832, was dedicated to Countess Pauline Plater, a fellow exiled Pole and one of Chopin’s favourite pupils. The Op 7 set was dedicated to a Mr Johns, an American whom Chopin introduced to his friend Heller as ‘a distinguished amateur from New Orleans’. No 1 in B flat major is one of the best known of all the mazurkas. The four mazurkas in each of the Op 17 (1834) and Op 24 (1835) sets mark a distinct advance in their depth of expression. Here Chopin begins to elaborate the mazurka from a short salon piece into something more ambitious and aristocratic in tone. Key changes from one section to another are subtly and poetically accomplished; codas of exquisite charm are introduced. Op 17 No 4 in A minor is one of the most important mazurkas and among Chopin’s most moving creations. There are few pages of piano music that are more despairing and helpless, a mood broken only by the central A major section. It is, says Charles Rosen, ‘an ideal Romantic fragment: complete and provocative, well-rounded and yet open’. Op 17 bears a dedication to the singer Lina Freppa, a friend of Bellini, Op 24 to the Comte de Perthuis, King Louis-Philippe’s director of music. Schumann reviewed both the Opp 30 and 33 sets. Of the former, published in 1835 and dedicated to Princess Maria Czartoryska, he wrote: ‘Chopin has elevated the Mazurka to a small art form; he has written many, yet few among them resemble each other. Almost every one contains some poetic trait, something new in form and expression.’ The Op 33 set returns somewhat to the mood of Opp 6 and 7. ‘His forms seem to grow ever brighter and lighter—or are we becoming accustomed to his style?’, asks Schumann. ‘These mazurkas will charm every one instantly, and seem to us more popular in character than his earlier ones.’ Countess Roza Mostowska, another aristocratic Polish pupil of Chopin, was the dedicatee. In a letter to his friend Julian Fontana written in June 1839, Chopin announced: ‘You know that I have four new mazurkas: one from Palma [Majorca, from where he and George Sand had recently returned], three from here [Sand’s house in Nohant]. They seem to me pretty, as the youngest children usually do when the parents grow old.’ The wonderful Op 41 mazurka in C sharp minor has a tune described by the critic James Huneker as ‘a little saddened by life, but courage never fails’; No 1 in E minor, the one written in Majorca, he characterizes as ‘sad to the point of tears’. “…Ohlsson brings a phenomenal variety of expression and depth of characterisation to these exquisite miniatures - an approach that manages to capture the folk elements of the composer's style to quite hypnotic effect.” BBC Music Magazine, February 2010 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Chopin: Piano Sonata No. 3
Ka Ling Colleen Lee (piano) Ka Ling Colleen Lee, a rising star of Chopin interpretation, has won numerous awards at many leading piano competitions, including sixth prize at the Fifteenth International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw. Her sense of form and particular sensitivity to the timbres of the instrument have borne fruit in outstanding renderings of the B minor Sonata and the Polonaise-fantasy. Both these works appear on this disc, alongside Mazurkas from Op. 33 and six Preludes from Op. 28. | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Chopin: Mazurkas (Vols.1 & 2)
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| |  | Maurizio Pollini - Chopin Recital
Chopin holds a pre-eminent place in Pollini's career; in 1960 he was awarded the first prize at the International Chopin Competition in Warsaw and appeared in the same year at La Scala, Milan, playing Chopin's First Piano Concerto under Sergiu Celibidache. This was the start of his extraordinary musical career. Despite this huge success, Pollini ceased performing Chopin in order not to become stamped as a mere Chopin interpreter. But he returned to him many times later Maurizio Pollini says that Chopin composed almost exclusively masterpieces and that he didn't tolerate music that had no thinking behind it. After the successful release of the complete Chopin Nocturnes in 2005 (Echo Award, Grammy, Victoires de la Musique Classique Award), the Italian maestro again turns his attention to Chopin: he has re-recorded the famous Sonata no. 2 in B flat minor, op. 35 (recorded in 1984 and released in 1986) and the Ballade no. 2 in F (recorded and released in 1999) and added the Mazurkas op. 33, Waltzes op. 34 and Impromptu no. 2 in F sharp major, op. 36. All of these works were composed in a relatively late phase of Chopin’s career (1834–1839) and display the great variety of his art The message is simple: one of the greatest pianists of our times interprets Chopin, a composer that moves both classical music connoisseurs as well as a wider audience. As Pollini says: "I play Chopin more freely than I did in my youth, or at the time of the Chopin competition. I like my old recordings, but some of them strike me today as rather straight." Reason enough to make classical-music fans curious to hear how Pollini's Chopin sounds nowadays Pollini’s Nocturnes sold + 91.000 units worldwide and achieved Gold status in Italy “Pollini begins with one of the finest accounts of the Ballade No 2 that I have heard, the maelstrom that erupts after the pastoral first page sounding like a howl of despair.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2008 “…this recital… proves Pollini's stature as one of the greatest Chopin players of his time. His tone not only sings, but speaks with the eloquence of a great orator. The Sonata's glories included a chilling transformation of tone in the final moments of the Funeral March and a unison finale played with such fluidity that you can barely hear the individual notes slide into one another. This disc is coming to my desert island.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2009 ***** “He has recorded the two major works here, the second Ballade and the B flat minor Sonata before, but both of these are titanic performances, full of perfectly focused power and high-tensile lyricism...the sheer aristocratic authority of the playing sweeps all before it. On this kind of form, Pollini has few pianistic peers in the world today.” The Guardian, 17th October 2008 ***** | | | (Sorry, download not available in your country) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. |
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The vibrant young Canadian pianist Jean-François Latour has established a reputation as a poetic and imaginative artist with brilliant technique and a strong personal voice. A protégé of Leon Fleisher, he is enjoying a rapidly growing prominence on the international scene including engagements in Paris, Toulouse, Geneva, Hamburg, Brussels, Moscow, Washington, Baltimore, and Chicago. His debut on ATMA is a solo recording consisting of a microcosm of Chopin’s pianistic art: the Préludes opus 28 — music closely identified with the relationship between the composer and Georges Sand; the Polonaise in C sharp minor opus 26, no. 1, the Mazurkas opus 33 and the Nocturnes (opus 9 no. 2 and opus 15 no. 3). | | | (also available to download from $10.50) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Chopin: Complete Mazurkas
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| |  | Chopin: Mazurkas, Vol. 1
| | | (also available to download from $6.00) | Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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| |  | Chopin: Piano Works
Chopin: | Waltz No. 7 in C sharp minor, Op. 64 No. 2 Polonaise No. 1 in C sharp minor, Op. 26 No. 1 Barcarolle in F sharp major, Op. 60 Polonaise, Op. posth Nocturne No. 5 in F sharp major, Op. 15 No. 2 Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9 No. 2 Ballade No. 3 in A flat major, Op. 47 Mazurkas (4), Op. 33 Mazurka No. 45 in A minor, Op. 67 No. 4 Mazurka No. 34 in C major, Op. 56 No. 2 Nocturne No. 15 in F minor, Op. 55 No. 1 Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52 Tarantella in A flat major, Op. 43 |
Zinaida Ignatieva (piano) DDD | | | Usually despatched in 8 - 10 working days. |
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