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Alfred Brendel - Alfred Brendel: Beethoven & Mozart - Variations & Sonatas (2023)

Alfred Brendel - Alfred Brendel: Beethoven & Mozart - Variations & Sonatas (2023)

BAND/ARTIST: Alfred Brendel

  • Title: Alfred Brendel: Beethoven & Mozart - Variations & Sonatas
  • Year Of Release: 2023
  • Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 4:16:15
  • Total Size: 816 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Introduction col basso del Tema
02. Variation 1
03. Variation 2
04. Variation 3
05. Variation 4
06. Variation 5
07. Variation 6 & 7
08. Variation 8
09. Variation 9
10. Variation 10
11. Variation 11
12. Variation 12
13. Variation 13
14. Variation 14 & 15
15. Finale. Alla Fuga. Allegro con brio
16. Tema. Vivace - Var. 1. Alla marcia maestoso
17. Var. 2. Poco allegro
18. Var. 3. L'istesso tempo
19. Var. 4. Un poco più vivace
20. Var. 5. Allegro vivace
21. Var. 6. Allegro ma non troppo e serioso
22. Var. 7. Un poco più allegro
23. Var. 8. Poco vivace
24. Var. 9. Allegro pesante e risoluto
25. Var. 10. Presto
26. Var. 11. Allegretto
27. Var. 12. Un poco più moto
28. Var. 13. Vivace
29. Var. 14. Grave e maestoso
30. Var. 15. Presto scherzando
31. Var. 16. Allegro
32. Var. 17. Allegro
33. Var. 18. Poco moderato
34. Var. 19. Presto
35. Var. 20. Andante
36. Var. 21. Allegro con brio - Meno allegro - Tempo I
37. Var. 22. Allegro molto. Alla "Notte e giorno faticar" di Mozart
38. Var. 23. Allegro assai
39. Var. 24. Fughetta. Andante
40. Var. 26. Piacevole
41. Var. 27. Vivace
42. Var. 28. Allegro
43. Var. 29. Adagio ma non troppo
44. Var. 30. Andante, sempre cantabile
45. Var. 31. Largo, molto espressivo
46. Var. 32. Fuga. Allegro - Poco adagio
47. Var. 33. Tempo di minuetto moderato, ma non tirarsi dietro
48. 1. Allegro
49. 2. Andante amoroso
50. 3. Rondeau (Allegro)
51. 1. Adagio (2004 Recording)
52. 2. Menuetto I-II (2004 Recording)
53. 3. Allegro (2004 Recording)
54. 1. Allegro
55. 2. Adagio
56. 3. Allegretto
57. I. Allegro
58. II. Adagio
59. III. Allegro assai
60. I. Allegro (2000 Recording)
61. II. Andante cantabile (2000 Recording)
62. III. Allegretto grazioso (2000 Recording)
63. I. Molto allegro (2000 Recording)
64. II. Adagio (2000 Recording)
65. III. Allegro assai (2000 Recording)
66. 1. Tema (Andante grazioso) con variazioni (1975 Recording)
67. 2. Menuetto (1975 Recording)
68. 3. Alla Turca (Allegretto) (1975 Recording)
69. Beethoven: Bagatelle in A Minor, WoO 59 "Für Elise"
70. 1. Andante con moto
71. 2. Allegro
72. 3. Andante
73. 4. Presto
74. 5. Quasi Allegretto
75. 6. Presto - Andante amabile e con moto
76. Thema (Adagio)
77. Variation I
78. Variation II (Allegro ma non troppo)
79. Variation III (Allegretto)
80. Variation IV (Tempo di menuetto)
81. Variation V: Marcia (Allegretto)
82. Variation VI - Coda (Allegretto)
83. 1. Adagio (1991 Recording)
84. 2. Menuetto I-II (1991 Recording)
85. 3. Allegro (1991 Recording)

Alfred Brendel is the preeminent thinking pianist, a loner to whom fame came through the power of imaginative integrity, an artist who has achieved -- at his best -- a divinatory rapport with piano literature from Bach to Schoenberg. Yet by his account, "I did not come from a musical or intellectual family....I have not been a child prodigy. I do not have a photographic memory; neither do I play faster than other people. I am not a good sight-reader." Born in Wiesenberg, Moravia -- in the latter-day Czech Republic -- in 1931, he received piano lessons from ages 6 to 16, as the family moved from Zagreb to Graz, and studied composition privately while supporting himself in a variety of odd jobs. Brendel was among the first generation to learn from recordings, the legacies of Cortot, Kempff, Schnabel, Furtwängler, and Toscanini proving especially valuable. Master classes with Eduard Steuermann -- a pupil of Busoni and Schoenberg -- and Edwin Fischer crowned his scarce tuition. A 1948 debut recital in Graz marked the beginning of his career, launched by taking a prize at the Busoni Competition in Bolzano in 1949. Busoni's example, his mysticism and Faustian striving, fascinated the young Brendel -- he recorded Busoni's Fantasia Contrappuntistica in the early 1950s -- but proved a detour while prompting an extraordinary insight into the music of Liszt. The ensnaring and gradual liberation from Busoni's influence may be traced in the several essays Brendel wrote about him in Musical Thoughts & After-Thoughts. Fischer came to mean more. "With Fischer," Brendel wrote in 1960, "one was in more immediate contact with the music: there was no curtain before the soul when he communicated with the audience. One other musician, Furtwängler, conveyed to the same degree this sensation of music not being played, but rather happening by itself." Armed with such ideals, Brendel embarked upon an international recital and recording career which, in the decade of the 1960s, saw his reputation grow throughout Europe and North America as he became a frequent guest with the world's greatest orchestras. He performed the entire cycle of Beethoven sonatas in London's Wigmore Hall in 1962, and recorded them for Vox. In the 1970s he became an exclusive Philips artist, touring and recording prolifically, not only the Classical masters -- Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, and Schumann -- but Liszt, Mussorgsky, Stravinsky, Bartók, and Schoenberg, and garnering numerous awards. He has published books of comedic poetry and musical criticism. In 2004 he appeared in concert with his son, cellist Adrian Brendel. Brendel announced his retirement in 2007 and undertook one last, worldwide concert and recital tour, ending in Vienna in December 2008, performing, appropriately enough, Mozart's "Jeunehomme" Piano Concerto. © Adrian Corleonis


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