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Laurence Oldak - Chopin '2023

24bit
Chopin
ArtistLaurence Oldak Related artists
Album name Chopin
Country
Date 2023
GenreClassical Piano
Play time 01:15:22
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
Media WEB
Size 267 mb / 1.25 gb
PriceDownload $8.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist

01. Barcarolle, Op. 60
02. Valse, Op. 64 No. 2
03. Grande valse brillante, Op. 34 No. 2
04. Grande valse brillante, Op. 18
05. Fantaisie-Impromptu, Op. 66 post.
06. Polonaise-Fantaisie, Op. 61
07. Nocturne, Op. 62 No. 2
08. Mazurka, Op. 17 No. 4
09. Mazurka, Op. 30 No. 4
10. Mazurka, Op. 63 No. 2
11. Mazurka, Op. 63 No. 3
12. Mazurka, Op. 67 No. 4
13. Scherzo, Op. 31 No. 2
14. Nocturne in C-Sharp Minor, B. 49 "Lento con gran espressionne"



What better introduction to a new Chopin programme than the Barcarolle op. 60? A
pure masterpiece! Debussy recommended its study to his pupil Catherine de
Romilly: "You will work on it until you play it well, and for years if
necessary!" Written in the summer of 1846, in parallel with the
Polonaise-Fantasy op. 61, the work brings together all the subtleties and the
most refined colours of Chopin’s universe. After a short, questioning
introduction on the dominant, the left hand begins a calm, swinging
accompaniment that introduces the shimmering theme in thirds and sixths, which
is most bewitching! The utmost flexibility is obviously required here, and it is
not until the bridge in A major that the tempo slowly comes to life. But
suddenly, a trill on the dominant suspends the flow and, after a succession of
breathless, melancholy chords, lands for two bars on an extraordinary
iridescence in C# major, like a miracle! Then, after a brief modulation, the
theme returns with even more joy, leading to a fiery, shimmering coda that
concludes this astonishing piece with radiant luminosity.

Next come three refreshingly different Waltzes. The marvellous C# minor Op. 64
No. 2 was dedicated to the delicate Baroness Nathaniel de Rothschild and
contains all the aristocratic grace of the dedicatee. Op. 34 No. 2 is full of
sadness and melancholy, but with a variety of inflections. Chopin must have been
particularly fond of it, for he sometimes improvised a delightful counterpoint
in the high register, after the episode in A major, for his pupil Camille
Dubois-O’Meara, a manuscript of which has happily been found and
preserved. Finally, the earlier Grande valse brillante op.18, is the very type
of waltz that delighted the many guests of the Parisian salons that Chopin
frequented or indeed those at the Château de Nohant. It allowed Chopin to
show off his brio, the variety of colour in his playing, as well as the
lightness of touch possible on the new Pleyel machines!

The Posthumous Impromptu, wrongly called "Fantaisie-Impromptu" was in reality
the first of the four to be composed, in 1835. A dazzling piece, it is extremely
simple in construction (ABA + Coda). The great central melody, "Moderato
Cantabile" in D flat, unfolds with breadth, but "con anima", without the
traditional cloying languor... And the coda closes the piece in a very gentle,
melodious manner.

The Polonaise-Fantaisie op. 61, written in 1846, is an unusual piece. The choice
of title embarrassed Chopin: "something I just don’t know how to name",
he once confessed... Indeed, it is not until the 22nd bar that the
characteristic Polonaise rhythm is revealed! Before that, a long introduction of
an improvised character gives rise to a succession of large arpeggios that cover
the entire keyboard in colours that are in turn solemn and mysterious. Once the
theme is launched, "a tempo giusto", the performer must obviously keep its
singing character but also maintain the relentless rhythm! Multiple modulations
then lead to a large, very tender episode in B major, which culminates in a
passage of trills, full of suspense which lead to a quasi-whispered
recapitulation. Chopin then launches an immense crescendo (of which there are
very few other examples in his work!) which brings about an intensely lyrical
explosion of the theme. Then comes the coda, over a long held dominant, which
gave Chopin the opportunity to indicate two different pedals on each of the
manuscripts.

With the Nocturne op. 62 no. 2, composed in the same year, 1846, we are in the
great Bellinian field that Chopin loved so much! An admirable score cut into
three parts, the middle "agitato" part already announcing Fauréian
convolutions, contains all the art of counterpoint practised by Chopin. A return
to the dominant then initiates a surprising modulation, before a pacified Coda,
the simplest there is. This is the end of a magnificent trilogy - Barcarolle op.
60, Polonaise-Fantaisie op. 61, Nocturne op. 62 - which marks the summit of
Chopin’s art. After this summeŕ 1846, Chopin left Nohant, never to
return, his romantic relationship with George Sand having deteriorated
considerably.

Throughout his life, Chopin composed Mazurkas, a form that was particularly dear
to him. From his childhood onwards, he was influenced by these dances, with
their strong accents which generally shifted onto the 2nd or 3rd beat, and which
sometimes led to vehement arguments between musicians at the piano! The one
between Chopin and Meyerbeer has remained famous, Chopin having very rarely been
‘red in the face’ as witnesses have recounted... Among the 46 that
are published, Laurence OLDAK has chosen to retain a group of five particularly
endearing "favourites". First of all, the strange Op. 17 No. 4 in A minor,
composed in 1834, which Lenz, Chopin’s pupil, nicknamed "the mourning
face", a name that pleased Chopin. Then Op. 30 No. 4, from 1837, in his beloved
key of C# minor, full of restrained impulses, before a terribly depressive
ending. The admirable Op. 63 No. 2 in F minor, from 1846, which belongs to the
"Kujawiak" style, an image of the deep melancholy that overwhelmed all emigrant
Poles. Then, one of the most beautiful, again in his beloved key of C# minor,
Op. 63 No. 3 (1846) with a simply dazzling ending in canon! Finally, Op. 67 No.
4, also composed in 1846, but only published in 1855, with its middle part in A
major and an ending indicated by Chopin as "legatissimo".

Of the four Scherzos, the 2nd in Bb minor was written in 1837. Chopin said of
the first theme, during a lesson: "this must be a house of the dead!” It
is a dramatic piece, with breathless interjections. The second idea is a
distraught cantilena, strongly inspired by bel canto. But the central part, in A
major, is much calmer, and precedes a tumultuous development, leading to the
recapitulation.

In conclusion, let us thank Laurence OLDAK for closing this fine programme with
a piece of unimaginable beauty; the Lento con gran espressione, unjustly renamed
by many publishers as the "Posthumous Nocturne", which Chopin sent from Vienna,
in 1830, to his sister Ludwika on a very brief sheet of paper, the first
scribbled sketch of which is to be found in the precious archives of the
Carthusian monastery in Valdemosa. The dedication affectionately mentions "to my
sister Louise, as an exercise before tackling my 2nd concerto". The middle
section contains several elements from the 2nd and 3rd movements of the
concerto, but the end gradually unravels and fades away, pianissimo, in C# major
at the high-pitched extremity of the keyboard...

One quite understands the admiration of the great Liszt who declared on January
1, 1876: "No one else should be compared to him, he shines alone and unique in
the sky of art."



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