Massimo Piva, Inessa Filistovich – Music for Viola & Piano by Reinecke, Schumann, Vieuxtemps, Wieniawski, Sibelius and Bridge (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:02:39 minutes | 1,17 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Digital Booklet, Front Cover | © Brilliant Classics
On this unique and originally programmed journey, the violist Massimo Piva takes the kind of fantasy journey (Fantasiereise) that forms one of the cornerstones of German Romanticism. It is in the context of highly wrought, fantastic tales that Schumann’s style is formed from a literary point of view: Hoffmann’s short stories and Jean Paul’s novels, inhabited by bizarre characters and surreal situations, are his polar stars. On the musical side, he had an 18th-century heritage of fantasies by composers such as Mozart or C.P.E. Bach to draw upon, in which the notion of the fantasy is still linked to the Baroque idea of improvisation.This is the background to the Märchenbilder Op.113, which Schumann worked on feverishly in March 1851. As a masterpiece in his late style, the collection shivers with obsession and fevered dreams. Placing them side by side illuminates the degree to which Reinecke was inspired by Schumann’s example in his own Fantasiestücke Op.43. But this recital moves on into less familiar territory, where the viola’s personality as a melancholy guide takes us to repertoire by Vieuxtemps (an F minor Elegy), Wieniawski (Rêverie in F sharp minor) and Sibelius (Rondo in D minor) by composers much better known for their prowess as violinists, and as violinst-composers.
The recital reaches a natural chronological end with the pre-eminent poet of the viola in the early decades of the 20th century, Frank Bridge. No violist he, but inspired by the artistry of Lionel Tertis, Bridge came to write a good deal for the instrument such as the Two Pieces featured here, and found its mellow, soulful voice a natural fit for his own as a composer.
As a former member of the Lucerne Festival Orchestra and Orchestra Mozart, Massimo Piva worked extensively with the conductor Claudio Abbado. As a member of the Quartetto Prometeo he has performed both modern and classic repertoire across Europe, working with composers including Sciarrino and Fedele, and recorded the complete works for string quartet by Hugo Wolf on Brilliant Classics (94166).
Tracklist:
1-1. Massimo Piva – 3 Phantasiestücke, Op. 43: I. Romanze (03:18)
1-2. Massimo Piva – 3 Phantasiestücke, Op. 43: II. Allegro molto agitato (06:33)
1-3. Massimo Piva – 3 Phantasiestücke, Op. 43: III. Jahrmarkt-Scene. Eine Humoreske. Molto vivace (05:25)
1-4. Massimo Piva – Märchenbilder, Op. 113: I. Nicht schnell (03:46)
1-5. Massimo Piva – Märchenbilder, Op. 113: II. Lebhaft (04:12)
1-6. Massimo Piva – Märchenbilder, Op. 113: III. Rasch (02:55)
1-7. Massimo Piva – Märchenbilder, Op. 113: IV. Langsam, mit melancholischem Ausdruck (06:51)
1-8. Massimo Piva – Élegie in F Minor, Op. 30 (07:18)
1-9. Massimo Piva – Rêverie in F-Sharp Minor (07:41)
1-10. Massimo Piva – Rondo in D Minor, JS162 (06:47)
1-11. Massimo Piva – 2 Pieces for Viola and Piano: I. I. Pensiero, H.53a (04:56)
1-12. Massimo Piva – 2 Pieces for Viola and Piano: II. Allegro appassionato, H.82 (02:56)
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