[ Delphian / 2 CD ]
Release Date: Monday 20 October 2014
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Schnittke's largest works for the piano are the three sonatas, which all date from the later part of his output. Piano Sonata No 1 (1987) is a substantial work by any standard, structured in four movements played without a break, and lasting upward of half an hour. The emotional journey of the piece is in many ways typical of the composer's work in the years following his first stroke. Piano Sonata No 2 (1990-91), written for Schnittke's wife Irina, follows a more traditional three-movement pattern. The opening is rather sensuous and overtly 'Romantic', wistful and bittersweet, its delicate counterpoint recalling Berg's Op. 1 Sonata. Piano Sonata No 3 (1992), first performed by Boris Berman in 1996, is an example of what we might call Schnittke's 'late style', pared down and without the extravagance of some of the works of the 1980s though of similar intensity. It was his last work for solo piano.
The shorter works included here, which along with the sonatas comprise Schnittke's entire published output for solo piano (including one piece for piano duet and another for six hands at one instrument), are mostly earlier than the sonatas, and are presented here in chronological order, with the cadenzas for four of Mozart's piano concertos as a sort of appendix.
Simon Smith studied piano with Richard Beauchamp [to whom these discs are dedicated] and composition with Tom David Wilson. As a pianist he has performed many of the landmarks of the 20th-century piano repertoire, most notably many of Stockhausen's Klavierstücke and the Piano Concerto and complete Etudes of György Ligeti. Following a performance of which latter he was acclaimed as 'a phenomenon - nothing daunts him, technically or musically' The Scotsman. For Delphian Records he has recorded solo music by James MacMillan and Stuart MacRae (Delphian DCD34009), Hafliði Hallgrímsson (DCD34051) and Thomas Wilson (DCD34079).
"I remember vividly the first time I heard a piece of music by Schnittke... It is not an exaggeration to say that that moment changed my life and certainly turned on its head the way that I thought about music and its possibilities. Thereafter I avidly devoured as much of Schnittke's music as I could get my hands on, and this recording is one of the results." Simon Smith
"Simon Smith has the technical wherewithal and serious musicianship that enable him to convey seemingly intractable passages with narrative cogency...His thoroughly researched annotations add further value to an important release." (Gramophone)
"This career-retrospective offers a fascinating glimpse of how a series of strokes affected Alfred Schnittke's work..captured by Simon Smith with extraordinary sensitivity, detail and emotional commitment." (Independent)
"Smith demonstrates complete empathy with Schnittke's distinctive sound-world. His playing has great dramatic immediacy...Altogether these are compelling and utterly persuasive accounts." (BBC Music)
Piano Sonata No. 1
Piano Sonata No. 2
Piano Sonata No. 3
Variations
Prelude and Fugue
Improvisation and Fugue
Variations on a Chord
Little pieces
Homage to Stravinsky, Prokofiev & Shostakovich
Five Aphorisms
Sonatina for piano four hands
Cadenza to Mozart's Piano Concerto No 24 in C minor, K491, first movement
Two Cadenzas to Mozart's Piano Concerto No 21 in C major, K467
Cadenza to Mozart's Piano Concerto No 25 in C major, K503, first movement
Two Cadenzas to Mozart's Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major, K39