FrançaisEnglish
Advanced Search
Top  Catalog  Our Labels  Classical  AVI Music  AVI8553337
MY ACCOUNT
MY WISHLIST
SHOPPING CART
Categories
Labels
Information
Schumann, Hiller : Quintettes pour piano. Koch, Quatuor Pleyel.
Diapason from May 2016
Review de Claire Wyniecki
Page No. 106
Format : 1 CD Digipack
Total Time : 01:06:04

Recording : 01/10/2014
Location : Zwickau
Country : Allemagne
Sound : Stereo

Label : AVI Music
Catalog No. : AVI8553337
EAN : 4260085533374
Price Code : DM021A

Publishing Year : 2015
Release Date : 28/10/2015

Genre : Classical
Robert Schumann (1810-1856)
Quintette pour piano en mi bémol majeur, op. 44

Ferdinand Hiller (1811-1885)
Quintette pour piano en sol majeur, op. 156

Tobias Koch, piano (piano Wilhelm Wieck, Dresde
1650)
Quatuor Pleyel de Cologne (instruments d'époque)
Ingeborg Scheerer, violon
Milena Schuster, violon
Andreas Gerhardus, alto
Andreas Müller, violoncelle

Suprême discipline, le quintette crée par Schumann associe le piano avec un quatuor à cordes classique. Auparavant le quintette comprenait piano, violon, alto, violoncelle et contrebasse. Ce modèle du genre, où le piano tient le rôle titre, a ensuite été repris par Brahms, Dvorak, Franck et…Hiller. Schumann l’écrit en 1842 en pleine période de séparation d’avec sa femme Clara, célèbre pianiste, qui est en tournée. Bien que dépressif, il compose une oeuvre romantique marquante et admirable. Le dialogue entre le piano et les cordes est tendu mais profondément expressif. Clara, dédicataire, le jouera en 1843 avec succès. L’autre quintette, signé Hiller, élève de Hummel et pianiste accompli, est dans le même ton général, logique quand on sait qu’il admire Schumann et fréquente leur ami commun Mendelssohn. Le piano y est moins dominateur mais quel modernisme dans certains échanges ! Une œuvre puissante, de belle facture et si peu connue. Tobias Koch, brillant pianofortiste allemand et schumanien reconnu, mène avec habileté et virtuosité le débat avec l’excellent et expérimenté Pleyel Quartet Köln. Le piano forte durcit quelque peu le discours mais quelle énergie et cohérence dans le jeu des interprètes. De la fougue et de la musicalité comme on l’aime. (Philippe Zanoly)

Among the composers of his day, he was a heavyweight who left a great number of works to posterity : over 200 compositions, including works for the stage, a string of song collections, various concertos and four symphonies, apart from a multitude of writings about music, personal diaries and over ten thousand letters. We are not referring to Robert Schumann, but to Ferdinand Hiller. Ennobled in 1875, he was still ranked without hesitation among the most influential musical figures of his time by the end of the 19th century. Yet his great reputation as a composer and a pianist paled alongside his prominent role as orchestra director and as organizer of the Lower Rhine Music Festivals in Düsseldorf and in Cologne. In 1865, for instance, 20-year old Friedrich Nietzsche participated along with hundreds of other chorus singers in that year’s festival, and wrote to his sister about those unforgettable experiences: “The most beautiful moment of all was the performance of Hiller’s symphony with the motto ‘Spring has to come!’; the musicians were in a state of rare enthusiasm, since we all held Hiller in the highest esteem. After each section, everyone broke into tremendous applause, and once the work was finished we started a similar ruckus that escalated even further. His throne was covered with wreaths of flowers and bouquets, and one of the artists placed a laurel wreath on his head. The orchestra then broke into a threefold fanfare; the old man covered his face and cried for joy.” It might be surprising that young Nietzsche found 53-old Hiller “old”, probably only because the composer had already held important, honored positions for so long. Contemporaries of his own generation such as Mendelssohn, Schumann and Chopin had been his friends, but were long deceased; Hiller must have felt like a monument from another era. Almost defiantly, he viewed himself as the heir of a tradition he traced back to Mozart, and in his writings he adopted a public stance against the New German School. Just as foreign as its main representatives Liszt and Wagner remained to him, he revered Johannes Brahms all the more, and wholeheartedly supported the career of Brahms’s Cologne pupil Max Bruch.

.  Write Review
Order Product

15,36 €
Catalogue Price : 21,95 €
IN STOCK
Ships within 24 hours!
Free Shipping is available for this item
Free Shipping Available!
Click here for more info

ClicMag of the month
ClicMag n°126 - 05/2024
ClicMag n°126 - 05/2024
Label Info
AVI Music
All CDs from this label
Label Website
Tell A Friend


Tell someone you know about this product.