All recordingsPrices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.) See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates. | |  | Ives & Barber - Piano Sonatas
“Hamelin’s virtuosity has to be heard to be believed” Classic FM Magazine “Charles Ives's massive Concord Sonata has been well served on disc… Marc-André Hamelin… consistently faster than his rivals whenever a speeding-up is indicated, but always maintains crispness of rhythm and an almost miraculously clear layering of textures; and the poetry of the slower passages is intensified by the heightened contrast. Samuel Barber's virtuoso Sonata benefits equally not only from Hamelin's technical brilliance, but also from his pianistic imagination...” BBC Music Magazine, November 2004 ***** | | | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | American Classics - Charles IvesPiano Music
Mayer has established himself as a champion of the American piano repertoire as well as a recording artist of the highest calibre: “his performances … are beautifully stylish and authentic, their bejewelled intricacies dispatched with nonchalant and fine-toned ease.” Gramophone | | | (also available to download from $6.00) | In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day. |
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| |  | Martin Perry plays Gordon Binkerd & Charles Ives
The featured music on this recording is the first recorded performance of the Ives’s ‘Concord Sonata’ (the John Kirkpatrick final edition). | 
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| |  | Ives - Piano Sonatas Nos. 1 & 2
Rene Eckhardt (piano) with Eleonore Pameijer (flute) ‘Charles Ives was an original man, a talented man, a courageous man. Let us honour him with his works’ Igor Stravinsky Ives was self-taught, and composed for pleasure in between his various business enterprises – he ran a successful insurance company. His early music, especially the first two symphonies show the influence of Schumann, Brahms and Dvorak. However, the music of America, specifically the music of New England permeates his music – hymn tunes, rag time music, jazz, military band music frequently come together in kaleidoscopic tapestries of sound. The two sonatas date from the early years of the 20th century, No.1 from 1900–10. The sonata is a montage of late-19th and early-20th century American life. Snatches of hymn tunes, rags, folk music and traditional songs. No.2 depicts the town of Concord in Massachusetts, and in particular the philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-82), naturalist Henry David Thoreau (1817-62), the Bronson Alcott (1799-1888) his daughter Louisa May (1832-88) and finally novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-64). Ives wrote that the sonata is ‘an attempt to present ones person’s impression of the spirit of the literature, the philosophy, and the men of Concord, Mass of over half a century ago’ .The sonata is written on a vast scale ( Ives had originally intended ‘Emerson’ and ‘Hawthorne’ as piano concertos) and is modelled on and quotes from the largest of all piano sonatas – Beethoven’s 29th ‘Hammerklavier’. Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony is also quoted throughout the sonata. The music is rough and ready, rugged and big boned – a mighty masterpiece from one of music’s great originals. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Looking Back on 20th Century Piano
Roger Muraro conceived this anthology of piano music in homage to the great French pianist Claude Helffer (1922 – 2004). It offers a broad panorama of the keyboard’s aptitude for creation and its infinite possibilities, from the fading lights of Romanticism to the bright spotlights of Contemporary. | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Ives plays IvesThe Complete Recordings of Charles Ives at the Piano, 1933-1943
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| |  | Ives: Piano Sonata & Songs
“Aimard invests even the simplest scalepassage with real swagger and purpose” Guardian Nov 2004 “Charles Ives to complaining pianist: 'Is it the composer's fault that man has only ten fingers?' Listening to Pierre-Laurent Aimard play the Concord Sonata it isn't Ives's dry wit but the assertion that man has only ten fingers that you begin to question. Nothing he wrote was 'reasonable' as in playable, singable. Everything was a stretch, a note or chord or counterpoint too far. Technically optimistic, spiritually aspirational. In a sense Aimard is almost too good, the realisation of everything Ives was striving for in this piece. You can almost hear Ives thinking: 'OK, if that's possible, let's go somewhere else…' Actually, the Concord Sonata goes wherever you want it to go. Its starting point is American literature but its substance is in ideas. Ives the transcendentalist: beyond the American dream. An amazing stream of consciousness. Concord is a town in Massachusetts, it's where American Independence was bloodily born; but it's also a word for harmony, and for Ives there's harmony in extreme diversity. The big moments in the sonata are all born out of flux. Ideas and notes boil over in the second movement, 'Hawthorne', but at its heart is the basic conflict between the earthly body and its free spirit. The body resists, the spirit meditates. There are moments here where you'd swear two pianists were involved. You'd also swear that the sorrowful song so fleetingly alluded to by solo viola (Tabea Zimmerman) in the first movement or the remnant of solo flute (Emmanuel Pahud) in the last are figments of your imagination. Ives's imagination – his rampant theatricality – should have made for great operas. Instead he wrote songs: capsule dramas laid out not in scenes or acts but moments in time. Susan Graham inhabits 17 such moments – nostalgic ('Songs my mother taught me'), visionary ('A sound of distant horn'), cryptic ('Soliloquy'), brutal ('1, 2, 3'), expectant ('Thoreau') – and the feminine and masculine qualities of her voice, to say nothing of her musical sensibility, easily encompass the 'expectancy and ecstasy' promised by the song 'Memories' – which appropriately enough recalls her (and others like her) as a little girl 'sitting in the opera house'. Aimard is again a one-man band. Almost literally so in 'The Circus Band'. When Graham shouts 'hear the trombones', you really do.” Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010 “It's a conceptual collage fraught with intellectual and technical difficulties...which makes Pierre-Laurent Aimard a near-perfect match, a pianist who revels in Ives's ideas and who's equal to the almost insane physical demands of the 'Concord' Sonata...and what a result: intelligent programming, breathtaking performances, and a crystal clear recording.” Andrew McGregor, bbc.co.uk, 24th June 2004 | | | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. |
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| |  | Varied AirCharles Ives - The Piano Music
Philip Mead (piano), Helen Brammen (flute), Elena Artemonova (viola) “This is a most desirable disc...these two discs contain just about all of Ives's best-known and most significant works for piano. ... Mead would be hard to beat” BBC Music Magazine | | | (also available to download from $21.25) | Usually despatched in 4 - 5 working days. (Available now to download.) |
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