Medtner - Sleeplessness: Complete Songs Vol.2
£9.45
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Label: Brilliant Classics
Cat No: 96061
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 19th February 2021
Contents
Artists
Ekaterina Levental (mezzo-soprano)Frank Peters (piano)
Works
Poems (4), op.45Poems (5), op.37
Poems (6), op.32
Pushkin Poems (6), op.36
Artists
Ekaterina Levental (mezzo-soprano)Frank Peters (piano)
About
Nikolai Medtner (1880-1951) was a Russian (with German roots) who lived outside the Soviet Union from 1921 and lived in London from 1936 until his death. He was a good friend of Rachmaninov and composed in a related style, with a hint of Scriabin here and there. His work dates from ‘the long 19th century’, ignoring the current of contemporary modernism; he continued to compose in a late romantic, tonal style until his last breath. Yet his music sings with its own voice. Medtner, a considerable virtuoso, wrote sonatas and concertos that place great demands on the pianist, at first glance rhapsodic in form but hiding considerable formal sophistication.
Seventy years and more after his death, Medtner no longer seems behind the times; his music may be enjoyed on its own terms, and a renaissance in his appreciation began around 30 years ago, but it was focused on the big sonatas and concertos. The pronounced narrative character of his music is perhaps best appreciated in the shorter piano pieces such as the Skazki ('fairy tales'). It is these pieces to which Medtner’s songs are most related.
Volume 2 continues to highlight Medtner’s deep affection for the poetry of Pushkin. The first song of Op.45 is like a love-letter to the figure who embodies the world of Russian Romantic literature, in a setting that mirrors the complex sentiments of the text. The composer returns time and again to the archetypally Romantic image of the lost and wandering soul, in moods of sleepless melancholy such as the opening song of Op.37. The Russian culture’s fascination with the sunny but temperamental south is addressed in the ‘Spanish Romance’ of Op.32, and its world-weary resignation to the circle of life is vividly dramatised in Op.45 no.2, ‘The Wagon of Life’.
‘Levental's singing is firm and secure; so too the phenomenal pianism of Peters. Both musicians demonstrate a wholehearted love for Russian music; sometimes with glowing passion, sometimes with silent desire. Volume 1 whets the appetite for a sequel. Medtner’s songs have been ignored for too long; they deserve better.’ – Gelderlander
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