Schumann: Kinderszenen, Op. 15 (Scenes from Childhood)

This page lists all recordings of Kinderszenen, Op. 15 (Scenes from Childhood), by Robert Schumann (1810-56) on CD, SACD, DVD & download (MP3 & FLAC). Generally, more recent releases are listed first, but with priority given to those that are in stock.

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Valentina Lisitsa Piano Recital

Valentina Lisitsa Piano Recital


Beethoven:

Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 'Appassionata'

Liszt:

Totentanz, S525 for solo piano

Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Thalberg:

Fantasia on Il barbiere di Siviglia, Op. 63


Described by critics as a ‘bona fide angel playing’ and an ‘electrifying pianist’, the young Ukrainian-born, North Carolina-based Valentina Lisitsa has been receiving rave reviews ever since her début in Avery Fisher Hall for the Mostly Mozart Festival. It would be hard to conceive of a more thoroughly Romantic or demanding programme than she presents here: Beethoven’s radical ‘Appassionata’ Sonata, via Schumann’s musical expression of an adult’s memories of childhood and Thalberg’s fantastic transformation of themes from Rossini’s most popular opera to Liszt’s pianistic danse macabre, inspired by a fresco by the medieval Italian artist Francesco Traini.

Released or re-released in last 6 months

Naxos - 8572491

(CD)

$8.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Vladimir Horowitz plays Schumann

Vladimir Horowitz plays Schumann


Schumann:

Arabeske in C major, Op. 18

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Toccata in C major, Op. 7

Fantasie in C major, Op. 17

Blumenstück, Op. 19


Sony Classical Masters - 88697719262

(CD)

$6.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Schumann: Davidsbündlertänze, Kinderszenen, Piano Sonata No. 2

Schumann: Davidsbündlertänze, Kinderszenen, Piano Sonata No. 2


Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Davidsbündlertänze, Op. 6

Piano Sonata No. 2 in G minor, Op. 22


Angela Hewitt has earned a richly deserved reputation for her interpretations of Bach and the Baroque, and something of that characteristic clarity illuminates her Schumann performances. Her first disc of this repertoire was praised for its ‘seemingly effortless but always adventurous interpretations … her poise and amplitude lending it an unearthly beauty’ and this second volume, containing some of the composer’s most bewitchingly beautiful music, should be no less lauded.

“The formal clarity of Hewitt's playing, together with the crispness of her articulation, gets her a long way in the sonata, whose technical demands are not to be underestimated...There's still an impressive sheen to everything Hewitt does” The Guardian, 25th November 2010 ****

“Hewitt conveys with intensity and brilliance the mounting tension, rapture and visceral drive that Schumann’s markings are surely meant to encourage...throughout the set Hewitt’s palette of colour is chosen with the utmost discretion and aptness.” The Telegraph, 26th November 2010 *****

“Her awareness of counterpoint and her skill at putting it across suits Schumann's colourfully woven textures to perfection. Davidsbündlertänze benefits from fine-pointed voicing, and her sense of light, springing rhythm keeps the élan flying, stopping the music from ever getting too bogged down” BBC Music Magazine, Christmas 2010 *****

“Everything is played as if in the heat of first inspiration, a reflection, perhaps, of a recreative richness mirroring Hewitt's encompassing and versatile repertoire. Few pianists are so brilliantly alive to every passing fancy and whimsicality. And again, few performances could be less studio-bound, more fleet, hallucinatory and above all more deeply imaginative.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2010

Hyperion - CDA67780

(CD)

$17.00

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Schumann: Scenes

Schumann: Scenes


Schumann:

Papillons, Op. 2

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Waldszenen, Op. 82

Theme with Variations in E flat major WoO 24 ('Geistervariationen')

Ahnung

World Premiere Recording


Last year Matthias Kirschnereit won the ECHO Klassic. For Schumann’s anniversary year he has chosen works covering the composer’s entire career and pays special attention to Schumann’s short, fleeting miniatures. This CD includes the world-premiere recording of Ahnung which was only discovered in 2006.

“Kirschnereit is a most sensitive and thoughtful pianist - beautifully recorded, too, as is usual from this source” Gramophone Magazine, August 2010

Berlin Classics - 0016682BC

(CD)

$17.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Schumann - Kinderszenen, Arabesque, Variations Abegg, Papillons, Novelettes

Schumann - Kinderszenen, Arabesque, Variations Abegg, Papillons, Novelettes


Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Arabeske in C major, Op. 18

Abegg Variations, Op. 1

Papillons, Op. 2

Novelletten (8), Op. 21

Piano Quintet in E flat major, Op. 44

Quatuor Bernede


“Pommier's coolly objective approach is admirably suited to the Novelletten and the early Abegg Variations.” BBC Music Magazine, October 2010 ****

Virgin Veritas - 6285252

(CD - 2 discs)

$11.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Pictures Reframed - Pictures at an Exhibition & Kinderszenen

Pictures Reframed - Pictures at an Exhibition & Kinderszenen


Mussorgsky:

Pictures at an Exhibition (piano version)

Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15


Leif Ove Andsnes embarks on a major project which marks a new departure for the internationally acclaimed pianist. Together with South African-born visual artist Robin Rhode he has created a special programme entitled Pictures Reframed which centres around Mussorgsky's epic piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition combining music, film and still imagery.

"There are pieces of music where you feel everything's there, everything is said" comments Andsnes. "Pictures at an Exhibition is the opposite, making it a perfect composition to experiment with as Mussorgsky's music is incredibly strong but also very open and experimental. The main thing isn't the notes themselves, but the composer's grand vision. For me therefore, the original version of the work remains almost as a sketch that is open for transformations and changes. You have this wild narrative of a person walking into an exhibition and he crashes into the first picture and is faced with various strong images and textures. Later in the cycle he becomes a part of the picture and it takes on so many aspects. Its psychologically challenging, I think."

Leif Ove Andsnes and Robin Rhode share a mutual fascination with Pictures at an Exhibition. Rhode had already been experimenting with images based on Mussorgsky's work and his 2008 digital animation "Promenade" has become the opening sequence for Pictures Reframed. With its characterful and constantly changing interplay between actor and drawing it fittingly sets the scene for the musical narrative to come. "I have always worked very closely with music" Rhode says "playing with the notion of rhythm and sound. This new project is not, therefore, so distant from my regular practice although classical music has such an intense history and that will be a difficult challenge."

Robin Rhode and Leif Ove Andsnes met for the first time in Munich in September 2007 and ideas for the programme have been evolving ever since, moving from piano to studio and back to piano. One of their early meetings took place in a derelict Berlin factory where Rhode started to draw on the bare wall - a backdrop that is often featured in his work, stemming from his introduction to art on the streets of Johannesburg. As Rhode embellished the imaginary instrument Andsnes stepped forward to perform on it, bringing another dimension to Rhode's playful and often illusionary work.

“In Andsnes's hands, both these great cycles, utterly different though they are, feel like first-hand, vital and highly personal experiences and it's these qualities that make this disc so compelling.” Gramophone Magazine, December 2009

“Leif Ove Andsnes' performance here has much to recommend it. There's his delicate, fluttering touch, almost like a hammer dulcimer, on the "Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle" section, and particularly the way the gossipy, chattering tone of "Limoges – Le Marche" is sustained until it founders on the funereal opening chords of the "Catacombs".” The Independent, 27th November 2009 ****

“Andsnes's performance is one of coruscating force...He sharpens the dynamic contrasts and always underlines the savagery and strangeness of the Pictures in their original piano form. Buy this CD with confidence.” The Times, 27th November 2009 ****

EMI - 6983602

(CD)

$12.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Pictures Reframed (Deluxe Version)

Pictures Reframed (Deluxe Version)

Exclusive CD, DVD & 150 page hardback book


Mussorgsky:

Pictures at an Exhibition (piano version)

Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15


A special luxury collector's edition of Pictures Reframed, including both a DVD and CD packaged together in an exhibition 156 pages catalogue-style hardback book with a wide selection of images from the creation and final performance version of Pictures Reframed.

Leif Ove Andsnes embarks on a major project which marks a new departure for the internationally acclaimed pianist. Together with South African-born visual artist Robin Rhode he has created a special programme entitled Pictures Reframed which centres around Mussorgsky's epic piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition combining music, film and still imagery.

"There are pieces of music where you feel everything's there, everything is said" comments Andsnes. "Pictures at an Exhibition is the opposite, making it a perfect composition to experiment with as Mussorgsky's music is incredibly strong but also very open and experimental. The main thing isn't the notes themselves, but the composer's grand vision. For me therefore, the original version of the work remains almost as a sketch that is open for transformations and changes. You have this wild narrative of a person walking into an exhibition and he crashes into the first picture and is faced with various strong images and textures. Later in the cycle he becomes a part of the picture and it takes on so many aspects. Its psychologically challenging, I think."

Leif Ove Andsnes and Robin Rhode share a mutual fascination with Pictures at an Exhibition. Rhode had already been experimenting with images based on Mussorgsky's work and his 2008 digital animation "Promenade" has become the opening sequence for Pictures Reframed. With its characterful and constantly changing interplay between actor and drawing it fittingly sets the scene for the musical narrative to come. "I have always worked very closely with music" Rhode says "playing with the notion of rhythm and sound. This new project is not, therefore, so distant from my regular practice although classical music has such an intense history and that will be a difficult challenge."

Robin Rhode and Leif Ove Andsnes met for the first time in Munich in September 2007 and ideas for the programme have been evolving ever since, moving from piano to studio and back to piano. One of their early meetings took place in a derelict Berlin factory where Rhode started to draw on the bare wall - a backdrop that is often featured in his work, stemming from his introduction to art on the streets of Johannesburg. As Rhode embellished the imaginary instrument Andsnes stepped forward to perform on it, bringing another dimension to Rhode's playful and often illusionary work.

“…an intriguing attempt to marry the world of musical sound with that of visual imagery and, by implication, reach out to a wider audience than the classical hardcore. …this collaboration between Leif Ove Andsnes and South African artist Robin Rhode presents a drastic reinterpretation of the score with moving images that have a far closer connection with the world of Soviet constructivism than that of 19th-century Realism. Traditionalists expecting to view something in line with the grotesque figures of Gnomus and Baba Yaga or hatching chickens may well be nonplussed by Rhode's abstract patterns of wires, printed fabrics patterns and a calliper compass. But other images such as the metal fence and barbed wire that accompany 'Bydlo' are stimulating and provocative.” BBC Music Magazine, January 2010 ****

EMI - 9670052

(CD - 2 discs)

$63.75

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Martha Argerich & Gidon Kremer - Live in Berlin

Martha Argerich & Gidon Kremer - Live in Berlin


Bartók:

Sonata for Solo Violin, BB 124, Sz. 117

Violin Sonata No. 1, BB 84, Sz. 75

Kreisler:

Liebesleid

encore

Schön Rosmarin

encore

Schumann:

Violin Sonata No. 2 in D minor, Op. 121

Kinderszenen, Op. 15


Martha Argerich (piano) & Gidon Kremer (violin)

EMI Classics is pleased to announce the release of a joint recital by the legendary pianist Martha Argerich and Gidon Kremer, one of today’s most original and compelling violinists. The concert was recorded live at Berlin’s Philharmonie in December 2006. The repertoire features Schumann’s Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 in D minor and Kinderszenen, as well as Bartók’s Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 1 and Sonata for Solo Violin. Two encores, Fritz Kreisler’s Liebesleid and Schön Rosmarin round out the release.

“A summit of two musical giants,” wrote the Abendzeitung München, reviewing the concert. “They are chamber music’s dream couple […] The way they communicate musically cannot be surpassed by any other current duo” said the Münchner Merkur. The Neue Zürcher Zeitung summed up the concert with the words “chamber music is alive.”

Interviewed in the film, Gidon Kremer muses about his decades-long partnership with Martha Argerich: “The paradox is that, even though we are not a couple in love, we speak an intimate language through our music of the kind that is usually only spoken between couples in love. It is even possible that, through our music, we can become even more closely entwined than a couple in love can be.”

At first sight, Robert Schumann and Béla Bartók might not appear to have much in common. Schumann represented the German romantic tradition and favoured rich, full harmonies, while Bartók sought to escape from that sound world, his music tending toward “extremes of delicacy or sparseness, or of complexity or roughness, as his vision dictates.” Yet the two composers do have much in common: both were pianist-composers in whose output their own instrument retains a central place yet both had the ambition to reach out and embrace every musical genre; both Schumann and Bartok maintained a strong interest in music education and both promoted the status of music in the wider cultural sphere.

Schumann’s second sonata, in D minor Op. 121, composed in 1851, was dedicated to Ferdinand David, the dedicatee of Mendelssohn’s E-minor Violin Concerto. After Schumann’s death, the sonata was often performed by Joseph Joachim with the composer’s wife, Clara, at the piano. Kinderszenen dates from 1838, a period in which Schumann concentrated on music for solo piano. Kremer comments, “I love listening to Martha from backstage. I love the way she masterfully recreates the fragility of Schumann’s Kinderszenen. It is simply a heart-stopping experience.”

Bartók completed the first of his two violin and piano sonatas in December 1921 and the second the following year. He dedicated both to Jelly d’Arányi, a brilliant young violinist whose playing thrilled him and with whom he fell in love. In both sonatas Bartók treats the two instruments as independent but complementary – they do not share material, as the violin and piano would do in classical duo sonatas. In November of 1943, Bartók met Yehudi Menuhin when he came to play the First Sonata for him, prior to a performance. This meeting inspired the composer’s Sonata for Solo Violin, which Menuhin premiered at Carnegie Hall the following year. Although its structure is traditional and it recalls the first Bach solo sonata, having a fugue as a second movement and a fast triple-time finale, its constant rhythmic inventiveness gives the work a sense of improvisatory freedom.

“…for…the performances that make this Berlin concert absolutely indispensable are the two Bartók sonatas. The First Sonata… reaches fever pitch in the finale where Kremer swings in on a glissando and the two go hell for leather as one racy folk-style motif follows another. The first CD concludes with one of the finest ever recorded performances of Bartók's Solo Sonata, Kremer calling on his full repertoire of violinistic devices which include, in addition to the many called for in the score, a mastery of tonal colouring and a rhythmic grip that at times seem to transcend the limitations of the instrument.” Gramophone Magazine, June 2009

“…what the Bartók in particular offers over and above their fine previous version is a sense of music-making caught on the wing. …the playing here is spectacularly vivid and assured. …above all there is Argerich in Schumann's Kinderszenen. Since she has all but given up playing solo works in public, her admirers will want to seize the opportunity of hearing this performance shot through with characteristic spontaneity.” BBC Music Magazine, June 2009 ****

“The electricity of a live occasion surges through this recital of Bartók and Schumann, which Gidon Kremer and Martha Argerich gave at Berlin’s Philharmonie in December 2006.” The Telegraph, 10th June 2009 *****

“One of the greatest recitals I ever reviewed for this paper was given by the duo of Gidon Kremer and Martha Argerich and here they are some two decades later in another live recital from Berlin that shows them still at the height of their astounding powers. The coupling of Schumann and Bartók may seem odd, but both are dense, complex composers. Each player offers a solo as well as duos: the highlights are Argerich's solo, Schumann's Kinderszenen, full of the most aching, subtle rubato; and the duo's Bartók Violin Sonata No 1, with its hair-raising, stop-start finale - it's earthy and exciting. As a sugary reward, there are two delectable Kreisler encores.” The Observer, 3rd May 2009

“The excitement is irresistible and their account of the first Bartók sonata is exceptional, too, balancing rhythmic drive against rhapsodic expressiveness. Each of them also has a work to themselves. Kremer gives a fabulously assured account of Bartók's solo-violin Sonata, while Argerich plays Schumann's Kinderszenen.” The Guardian, 24th April 2009 *****

“There are dazzling moments here, such as Kremer's bravura tackling of Bartók's Sonata for Solo Violin, where the astringent harmonies, bordering on dissonance, of the opening Tempa di ciaccona give way gradually to the dissipated state of the lyrical Melodia and then the animated Presto.” The Independent ***

“Listening to Argerich, you pant for more from her: more concerts, more solo performances. But we handle endangered species with kid gloves. Except when we applaud — which the Berlin audience does, repeatedly.” The Times, 17th April 2009 ****

GGramophone Magazine

Disc of the Month - June 2009

EMI - 6933992

(CD - 2 discs)

$13.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Horowitz plays Schumann


Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15

Kreisleriana, Op. 16

Fantasie in C major, Op. 17

Variations (Impromptus) on a Theme by Clara Wieck, Op. 5

Arabeske in C major, Op. 18

Toccata in C major, Op. 7

Blumenstück, Op. 19

Kinderszenen, Op. 15: Traümerei


Sony Tandem - 82876873902

(CD - 2 discs)

$12.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Lang Lang - Memory

Lang Lang - Memory


Chopin:

Piano Sonata No. 3 in B minor, Op. 58

Liszt:

Hungarian Rhapsody, S244 No. 2 in C sharp minor

Mozart:

Piano Sonata No. 10 in C major, K330

Schumann:

Kinderszenen, Op. 15


Lang Lang (piano)

“playing so full of personality and commanding virtuosity . .” Chicago Tribune

DG - 4775976

(CD)

$21.75

(Sorry, download not available in your country)

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

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