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Format : 1 CD Durée totale : 01:06:21
Enregistrement : 2020 Lieu : Otrebusy Pays : Pologne Prise de son : Stereo
Label : DUX Référence : DUX1628 EAN : 5902547016283 Code Prix : DM019A
Année d'édition : 2020 Date de sortie : 01/10/2020
Genre : Classique
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Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849)Quatre Mazurkas, op. 33 n° 1 en sol dièse mineur n° 2 en do majeur n° 3 en ré majeur n° 4 en si mineur Quatre Mazurkas, op. 41 n° 1 en mi mineur n° 2 en si majeur n° 3 en la bémol majeur n° 4 en do dièse mineur Trois Mazurkas, op. 50 n° 1 en sol majeur n° 2 en la bémol majeur n° 3 en do dièse mineur Karol Szymanowski (1882-1937)Douze Mazurkas, op. 50 Maria Korecka-Soszkowska, piano
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 According to a traditional adage, when a phenomenon, trend, or style becomes popular, ‘it has hit thatched houses.’ In the case of Fryderyk Chopin’s Mazurkas, however, the opposite was true – it was the folk music that found its way to the salons from thatched houses. The most famous Polish pianist experienced this kind of music during the holidays he would spend at his friends’ country estates, participating in various rites, harvest festivals, or singing and dancing evenings in taverns. Sprightly mazurkas, sorrowful kujawiaks, and brisk obereks from the Mazovia and Kujawy regions became the inspiration for sophisticated stylizations created throughout Chopin’s life and entered the canon of the world piano repertoire. Less than a century later, Karol Szymanowski, the precursor of the Polish musical avant-garde, engaged in a dialogue with the folk tradition, as a result of which, in 1924–26, he composed his own mazurkas, so different from Chopin’s. From thatched houses to salons, concert halls, and recording studios – we would like to introduce you to another link in the chain of Polish folk music interpretation.

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