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Grant Johannesen - Grant Johannesen Plays French Piano Music (1994)

Grant Johannesen - Grant Johannesen Plays French Piano Music (1994)
  • Title: Grant Johannesen Plays French Piano Music
  • Year Of Release: 1994
  • Label: Vox Box
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet)
  • Total Time: 3:36:27
  • Total Size: 854 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Disc 1

1. Grant Johannesen – Prélude, choral et fugue, FWV 21 (17:16)
2. Grant Johannesen – Nocturne No. 7 in C-Sharp Minor, Op. 74 (07:46)
3. Grant Johannesen – Impromptu No. 3 in A-Flat Major, Op. 34 (04:04)
4. Grant Johannesen – Impromptu No. 5 in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 102 (02:04)
5. Grant Johannesen – Quelques danses, Op. 26 (14:42)
6. Grant Johannesen – 6 Études pour la main gauche seule, Op. 135: No. 4, Bourrée (04:00)
7. Grant Johannesen – Poème des montagnes, Op. 15: Harmonie - I. Le chant des bruyères (06:18)
8. Grant Johannesen – Sous les lauriers roses (Soir de carnaval sur la côte catalane) (14:59)
9. Grant Johannesen – Pippermint-Get Waltz (04:49)

Disc 2

1. Grant Johannesen – Variations, interlude et finale sur un thème de Rameau (17:20)
2. Grant Johannesen – Bourrée fantasque (Version for Piano) (06:11)
3. Grant Johannesen – 5 Morceaux: No. 2, Ballabile (01:31)
4. Grant Johannesen – Impromptu in C Major (06:35)
5. Grant Johannesen – Préludes flasques (Pour un chien) (04:19)
6. Grant Johannesen – Croquis et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois (05:21)
7. Grant Johannesen – Poudre d'or (05:00)
8. Grant Johannesen – Suite in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 14: III. Bourrée (04:22)
9. Grant Johannesen – 3 Pieces, Op. 49 (06:59)
10. Grant Johannesen – 4 Romances sans paroles, Op. 129 (04:56)
11. Grant Johannesen – Hymne de glorification, Op. 331 (06:13)
12. Grant Johannesen – Sérénade grotesque, M. 5 (03:41)

Disc 3

1. Grant Johannesen, Luxembourg Radio Orchestra & Bernhard Kontarsky – Piano Concerto No. 4 in C Minor, Op. 44, R. 197: I. Allegro moderato - Andante (12:00)
2. Grant Johannesen, Luxembourg Radio Orchestra & Bernhard Kontarsky – Piano Concerto No. 4 in C Minor, Op. 44, R. 197: II. Allegro vivace - Andante - Allegro (13:34)
3. Grant Johannesen, Luxembourg Radio Orchestra & Louis de Froment – Ballade in F-Sharp Major, Op. 19 (Version for Piano & Orchestra) (13:50)
4. Grant Johannesen, Luxembourg Radio Orchestra & Louis de Froment – Fantaisie, Op. 111 (13:45)
5. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: I. Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum (01:55)
6. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: II. Jimbo's Lullaby (02:56)
7. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: III. Serenade for a Doll (02:31)
8. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: IV. The Snow Is Dancing (02:13)
9. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: V. The Little Shepherd (02:21)
10. Grant Johannesen – Children's Corner, L. 113: VI. Golliwogg's Cake-Walk (02:43)

Grant Johannesen emerged in the mid-20th century as one of the foremost American pianists of the postwar generation. He was best known for his interpretations of French music, particularly works by Fauré, whose entire solo output he recorded: Saint-Saëns, Poulenc, Milhaud, and Dukas. But he also played standards by Beethoven, Schubert, and Chopin and championed what was then contemporary music by American composers like Copland, Barber, Diamond, Harris, Mennin, and others, including first wife Helen Taylor. Johannesen performed on many live radio broadcasts and appeared numerous times in the 1950s and 1960s on the popular American television show The Bell Telephone Hour. He made many tours of Europe, the Soviet Union, and South America and produced a sizable discography, though a relatively small number of his recordings are still in the catalog. Such labels as Vox, Vai Audio, and Centaur offer some of them.

Grant Johannesen was born in Salt Lake City, UT, on July 30, 1921. He began piano studies at age five and became a pupil of Robert Casadesus at Princeton in 1939. Johannesen had later studies with Egon Petri, and then took lessons in composition from Roger Sessions in New York and Nadia Boulanger in Fontainebleau, France.

In 1944 Johannesen debuted in New York, the city he would make his base of operations for much of his career. 1949 was a pivotal year: Johannesen won the Ostend Concours Internationale Competition and then went on tour in Europe with the New York Philharmonic. Tragically, Johannesen's first wife, composer Helen Taylor, was killed in an auto accident in 1950. (Johannesen was married to cellist Zara Nelsova from 1963-1973.)

Johannesen made further successful European tours with the NYPO in 1956 and 1957. From 1960-1966 he taught piano at the Aspen School of Music, while maintaining a busy concert schedule, including radio and television appearances. Johannesen toured the Soviet Union with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra in 1965 and gave highly successful recitals there in 1962 and 1970. From 1974-1977 Johannesen served as director of the Cleveland Institute of Music, and then as its president from 1977-1985.

Johannesen remained active in his later years, even taking on new repertory when he recorded an album on the Bonneville label in 1995 entitled Rare Russian Music, containing transcriptions of orchestral music by Prokofiev and songs by Rachmaninov. On a visit to friends in Germany Johannesen died in Berlin in 2005. ~ Robert Cummings


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  • Millerdm1959
  •  wrote in 09:57
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Again many thanks!