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Blog home > Posts in April, 2009

New Schumann Piano Piece Discovered

Researchers have discovered the manuscript of a hitherto unknown piano piece by German composer Robert Schumann. Experts speak of “a sensational discovery”.
The twenty-four bar piece, named Ahnung, is not dated, but researches say it was written in 1838, the year in which Schumann also composed his famous Kinderszenen. The piece will have its premiere in September 2009, when it will be performed in the town of Ăśberlingen on the Bodensee where it was discovered.


/patrick
 
     

Powerful Leif Ove Andsnes Plays Rach 3

LIMITED AVAILABILITY

Available only until May 12, the Swedish Television offers a live HD performance of Sergei Rachmaninov´s third Piano Concerto with pianist Leif Ove Andsnes, the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra and conductor Lionel Bringuier as of February 20, 2009.

Content:
0:00 Introduction (in Swedish)
1:10 Alex Wade introduces Rach 3 and talks to Jonathan Philips
9:44 Interview with Leif Ove Andsnes (in Swedish) See summary in English below.
14:00 Live performance of the piano concerto

Click here to veiw the TV broadcast online.


Summary of interview with Leif Ove Andsnes

In the interview, the producer Camilla Lundberg asked Andsnes why he returned to the work after 15 years.
He first played and recorded it when he was only 24 years old, as his first Rachmaninov concerto.
Andsnes stated that the work defines crucial currents of modernity in the 20th century and therefore it has a special compositional and romantic quality. Having spent so much time with it, and when coming back to it with a new “bird perspective”, he felt that the contrasts and eruptive qualities of the piece should be more accentuated, which motivated him to have a second round with it. He also said that he found it unfortunate that the popularity of the film “Shine” led to the common notion that this concerto is nothing but a gladiator game.

One hundred years ago the work was premiered with Rachmaninov himself at the piano and Gustaf Mahler as conductor. History tells us how serious Mahler was in his work with the score and during rehersals. Andsnes considers this to be one of the moments in music history he would give anything to have experienced.


Rachmaninoff in action

Rachmaninoff in action

Being fortunate enough to have spent a lengthy preparation period (five years) with Rach 3 during the 1990s, I agree with the popular metaphorical statement that this concerto is a serious attempt to climb K2.
After deciphering the most economical ways of moving (including intelligent fingering), I spent enormous amount of time on finding full sound easiness in the musical lines. This work also demands a very conscious idea of what to be audible in sections where the piano and orchestra share the musical energy.
The access to a large number of recordings was very helpful in this respect and I found the Horowitz/Ormandy collaboration and the Ashkenazy/Fistoulari particularly helpful in building the tutti soundscapes of the grand piano sound in the grand romantic orchestra.


/patrick
 
     

Prokofiev: Diabolic Suggestions and 21 more Pieces

22 pieces by Sergey Prokofiev have been added to Piano Street’s library of downloadable sheet music:
Four Etudes, opus 2
Four Pieces, opus 3
Four Pieces, opus 4
Ten Pieces, opus 12

Listen to Sviatoslav Richter playing Diabolic Suggestions (opus 4 no 4):

Prokofiev - Diabolic Suggestions, sheet music to download and print

Prokofiev - Diabolic Suggestions, sheet music to download and print


/henrik
 
     

Lukas Foss – Pianist and Composer Dies at 86

Lukas Foss, an American pianist and composer, has died. He was 86.
Foss also had a career as a conductor.
His works include solo pieces for piano, choral and chamber music and many orchestral works in styles ranging from neo-classical to contemporary.
Born Lukas Fuchs in Berlin Aug. 15, 1922, he studied piano and music theory and composed music from an early age. He moved to Paris to study piano with Lazare Lévy in 1933. In 1937, he left for the U.S., where he studied composition with Paul Hindemith at Yale and conducting with Sergey Koussevitzky at Tanglewood.

Lukas Foss, pianist and composer

Lukas Foss, pianist and composer

He was known for composing in different musical styles, often combining past and present influences and techniques. An accomplished pianist, he performed with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He was also an experienced conductor, working with such orchestras as the Brooklyn Philharmonic, the Jerusalem Symphony and the Milwaukee Symphony. Foss directed six Ojai Music Festivals and led 12 marathon concerts at the Hollywood Bowl, each dedicated to one composer. He succeeded Arnold Schoenberg as head of composition at UCLA and taught there for 10 years.

Read more at www.latimes.com

Samples of piano music by Lukas Foss

Samples of Piano Concertos no 1 and 2


/patrick
 
     

Beethoven, Barenboim and Lang Lang in Summit Meeting

“It is not just sound. The problem is that this content cannot be really be articulated in an objective, rational, scientific way — with words.
If it were possible to articulate it in an objective, rational, scientific way, the music would not be necessary.”

In the Masterclasses series with Daniel Barenboim, he speaks about what
it is and what it takes to truly play Beethoven. Lang Lang, a younger
colleague playing the Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Appassionata, gets
some intense advice on how to reflect on different interpretational aspects.

View or print the sheet music!

Beethoven - Appassionata (Piano Sonata opus 57) br / Piano Street Urtext - *NEW* improved version

Beethoven - Appassionata (Piano Sonata opus 57) ,
Piano Street Urtext - *NEW* improved version


/patrick
 
     



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