Igor Levit: Encounter
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Label: Sony
Cat No: 19439786572
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 2
Genre: Instrumental
Release Date: 11th September 2020
Contents
Works
Vier ernste Gesange, op.121 (arr. Max Reger)Chorale Preludes (6), BV:B50 (Brahms)
Chorale Preludes (10), BV:B27 (JS Bach)
Palais de Mari
Sacred Songs (8), op.138
Artists
Igor Levit (piano)Works
Vier ernste Gesange, op.121 (arr. Max Reger)Chorale Preludes (6), BV:B50 (Brahms)
Chorale Preludes (10), BV:B27 (JS Bach)
Palais de Mari
Sacred Songs (8), op.138
Artists
Igor Levit (piano)About
With “Encounter” Levit presents several of the works featured within his concerts given from home, works rarely heard in the concert hall as a cycle such as Ferruccio Busoni’s transcriptions of Bach Organ Chorale Preludes or Busoni’s selection from the Eleven Chorale Preludes, op.122, by Johannes Brahms. After having fallen out of fashion today, music culture within a Christian and liturgical context is being given renewed focus by the interpreter of the highly acclaimed cycle of 32 Piano Sonatas by Beethoven. Much of it still sounds familiar although it is only rarely experienced in a live context.
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 1. Komm, Gott Schöpfer, Heiliger Geist, BWV 667 (Vivace maestoso)
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2Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 2. Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme, BWV 645 (Allegretto tranquillo)
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3Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 3. Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland, BWV 659 (Adagio)
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4Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 4. Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein, BWV 734 (Allegro)
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5Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 5. Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ, BWV 639 (Andante)
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6Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 6. Herr Gott, nun schleuß den Himmel auf, BWV 617 (Un poco agitato)
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7Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 7a. Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt, BWV 637 (Andante mesto)
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8Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 7b. Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt, BWV 705 (App. B) (Fuga. Molto sostenuto)
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9Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 8. In dir ist Freude, BWV 615 (Allegro marcato)
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10Bach arr. Busoni: 10 Chorale Preludes, BV B27: 9. Jesus Christus, unser Heiland, BWV 665 (Andante non troppo)
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11Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: Herzlich tut mich erfreuen, op.122/4 (Andante tranquillo)
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12Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: Schmücke dich, o liebe Seele, op.122/5 [Andante, quasi Adagio]
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13Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: Es ist ein Ros entsprungen, op.122/8 [Andantino]
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14Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: Herzlich tut mich verlangen, op.122/9 (Moderato deciso)
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15Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: Herzlich tut mich verlangen, op.122/10 (Andante tranquillo)
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16Brahms arr. Busoni: 6 Chorale Preludes, BV B50: O Welt, ich muss dich lassen, op.122/11 (Solennemente. Molto sostenuto)
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17Brahms arr. Reger: Vier ernste Gesänge, op.121: 1. Denn es gehet dem Menschen wie dem Vieh (Andante)
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18Brahms arr. Reger: Vier ernste Gesänge, op.121: 2. Ich wandte mich und sahe an alle (Andante)
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19Brahms arr. Reger: Vier ernste Gesänge, op.121: 3. O Tod, wie bitter bist du (Grave)
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20Brahms arr. Reger: Vier ernste Gesänge, op.121: 4. Wenn ich mit Menschen- und mit Engelszungen redete (Andante con moto ed anima)
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21Reger arr. Julian Becker: Nachtlied, op.138/3 (Ziemlich langsam)
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22Feldman: Palais de Mari
Europadisc Review
The Baroque-to-modern journey was one that Levit traced to splendid effect on his earlier three-disc box of major variation sets by Bach, Beethoven and Rzewski [2015]; here, in a very different context, it is just as potent. Levit begins with Busoni’s set of 10 Bach organ chorale preludes arranged for piano, richly textured and brilliantly adapted to the piano medium, with every strand clearly discernible in this gripping performance. The opening ‘Komm, Gott Schopfer, Heiliger Geist’ BWV667 is jubilant, the ever-popular ‘Wachet auf’ BWV645 purposeful yet quietly poised, while ‘Nun freut euch, lieben Christ gmein’ BWV734 rushes towards its close at dizzying speed. It is the third prelude, ‘Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland’ BWV659, that begins the inward journey, lent more intensity by the celebrated setting of ‘Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ’ from the Orgelbüchlein, and by two settings of the lament-like ‘Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt’. The new-year chorale ‘In dir ist Freude’ is again joyous and extrovert, but the final chorale, ‘Jesus Christus, unser Heiland’ BWV665 brings the set to a sombre (an contrapuntally masterful) close.
Less richly registered, more contemplative than Bach’s organ chorales are those of Brahms, six of which were arranged for piano by Busoni. These arrangements emphasise the autumnal glow of the music, and so does Levit’s meticulous observation of Busoni’s dynamic, articulative and pedal indications. Particularly affecting are the beautiful Advent chorale ‘Es ist ein Ros entsprungen’, with its lovely excursion to the instrument’s upper registers; two powerful settings of ‘Herzlich tut mich verlangen’, the first forthright, the second sinuously searching; and the dynamic contrasts of another ‘deathbed’ hymn ’O Welt, ich muss dich lassen’.
On the second disc, we leave behind the world of chorales and religious certainties, but the preoccupation with death is still there in Brahms’s Vier ernste Gesänge (Four Serious Songs), expertly transcribed for solo piano by Max Reger. It’s a tribute to both Reger’s gifts as arranger and Levit’s as performer that one barely notices the absence of the voice in these gems of Brahms’s late output, so enthralling is this performance, with its abundant clarity of detail, mellifluous phrasing and, where necessary (the closing chords of the first song, for example), incisive attack. The central two songs, ‘Ich wandte mich’ with its downward cycle of thirds and the elegiac ‘O Tod, wie bitter bist du’, are enormously powerful; the fourth song, ‘Wenn ich mit Menschen- und mit Engelszungen redete’, brings much-needed warmth and consolation.
Reger’s own unaccompanied motet Nachtlied, op.138 no.3, in a keyboard arrangement by organist Julius Becker, brings lighter textures into play: though they belie the nocturnal subject-matter, they make an ideal pivot to the spare, bright, tentative sounds of Feldman’s hypnotically hesitant Palais de Mari, inspired by fragments of ancient Babylonian ruins. Here Levit’s slow, steady tempo and phenomenal control of the music’s hushed dynamics make the often almost imperceptible changes in the music’s gradual unfolding even more enthralling than usual, the music poised on the brink between self and nothingness. It often seems that the echoes are all that stand between the performer/listener and emptiness. It’s a long way from the Lutheran conviction with which the programme opened, and it’s a journey that resonates in the mind long after the discs themselves have stopped playing. The album as a whole is captured with astonishing presence by producer and engineer Andreas Neubronner in Berlin’s Jesus-Christus-Kirche. Accompanied by Anselm Cybinski’s exceptionally thoughtful booklet notes, its ultimate message is surely one of hope as much as self-awareness. Certainly none of Levit’s many admirers will want to be without it.
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