|
艺术家:乔纳森·普洛赖特
专辑名称:勃拉姆斯:完整钢琴作品 第三卷
发行年份:2017年
厂牌:BIS
音乐类型:古典音乐
音质:24比特-96千赫兹FLAC(分轨+专辑手册)
总时长:1小时20分59秒
总大小:1.15吉字节
网站:专辑预览
曲目列表
01. 主题(0分19秒)
02. 变奏1(0分17秒)
03. 变奏2(0分17秒)
04. 变奏3(0分15秒)
05. 变奏4(0分18秒)
06. 变奏5(0分22秒)
07. 变奏6(0分21秒)
08. 变奏7(0分31秒)
09. 变奏8(0分42秒)
10. 变奏9(0分30秒)
11. 变奏10(0分19秒)
12. 变奏11(0分18秒)
13. 变奏12(0分17秒)
14. 变奏13(0分22秒)
15. 快板(双重乐章)- 第一速度 更活跃(2分48秒)
16. 第一首 升F小调随想曲(3分48秒)
17. 第二首 B小调随想曲(3分52秒)
18. 第三首 降A大调间奏曲(2分49秒)
19. 第四首 降B大调间奏曲(1分55秒)
20. 第五首 升C小调随想曲(3分00秒)
21. 第六首 A大调间奏曲(4分12秒)
22. 第七首 A小调间奏曲(4分13秒)
23. 第八首 C大调随想曲(3分56秒)
24. 第一首 B大调(0分47秒)
25. 第二首 E大调(1分15秒)
26. 第三首 升G小调(0分46秒)
27. 第四首 E小调(1分14秒)
28. 第五首 E大调(1分38秒)
29. 第六首 升C大调(0分57秒)
30. 第七首 升C小调(2分26秒)
31. 第八首 降B大调(1分25秒)
32. 第九首 D小调(1分15秒)
33. 第十首 G大调(0分32秒)
34. 第十一首 B小调(1分17秒)
35. 第十二首 E大调(2分31秒)
36. 第十三首 B大调(0分38秒)
37. 第十四首 升G小调(1分20秒)
38. 第十五首 降A大调(1分16秒)
39. 第十六首 升C小调(1分07秒)
40. 第一首 A小调间奏曲(1分50秒)
41. 第二首 A大调间奏曲(6分40秒)
42. 第三首 G小调叙事曲(3分32秒)
43. 第四首 F小调间奏曲(2分29秒)
44. 第五首 F大调浪漫曲(4分31秒)
45. 第六首 降E小调间奏曲(6分10秒)
乔纳森·普洛赖特此前两卷勃拉姆斯独奏钢琴作品系列专辑广受赞誉,包括在“今日古典”网站获得10/10评分、《Diapason》杂志满分评价,以及《BBC音乐杂志》“月度器乐之选”。在第三张专辑中,普洛赖特向听众展现了约翰内斯·勃拉姆斯看似矛盾的两面:情感深沉浓烈却结构严谨的晚期钢琴作品Op.118及其前身Op.76,与16首《圆舞曲》Op.39中大部分(甚至全部)作品毫不掩饰的外向风格和跃动活力,以及华丽的《匈牙利旋律变奏曲》并存。勃拉姆斯对匈牙利吉普赛音乐的痴迷源于他与小提琴家爱德华·雷门伊的友谊,并在多部作品中得以体现,其中《匈牙利舞曲》可能最为著名。作曲家也是小约翰·施特劳斯的朋友和崇拜者,在Op.39中他成功涉足维也纳“圆舞曲之王”的领域。不难猜想,勃拉姆斯早年在酒馆和餐厅担任钢琴家的经历促使他创作这种精致的轻音乐,但也有商业因素:他先为四手联弹创作了这些圆舞曲,随后又为独奏钢琴做了不少于两次的全套改编。
“我觉得这将在未来一段时间内成为勃拉姆斯作品的标杆性专辑。” ——《留声机》编辑之选,2016年2月
Artist: Jonathan Plowright
Title: Brahms: Complete Piano Vol. 3
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: BIS
Genre: Classical
Quality: 24bit-96kHz FLAC (tracks+booklet)
Total Time: 01:20:59
Total Size: 1.15 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Theme (0:19)
02. Variation 1 (0:17)
03. Variation 2 (0:17)
04. Variation 3 (0:15)
05. Variation 4 (0:18)
06. Variation 5 (0:22)
07. Variation 6 (0:21)
08. Variation 7 (0:31)
09. Variation 8 (0:42)
10. Variation 9 (0:30)
11. Variation 10 (0:19)
12. Variation 11 (0:18)
13. Variation 12 (0:17)
14. Variation 13 (0:22)
15. Allegro (il doppio Movimento) - Tempo I più animato (2:48)
16. No. 1. Capriccio in F-Sharp Minor (3:48)
17. No. 2. Capriccio in B Minor (3:52)
18. No. 3. Intermezzo in A-Flat Major (2:49)
19. No. 4. Intermezzo in B-Flat Major (1:55)
20. No. 5. Capriccio in C-Sharp Minor (3:00)
21. No. 6. Intermezzo in A Major (4:12)
22. No. 7. Intermezzo in A Minor (4:13)
23. No. 8. Capriccio in C Major (3:56)
24. No. 1 in B Major (0:47)
25. No. 2 in E Major (1:15)
26. No. 3 in G-Sharp Minor (0:46)
27. No. 4 in E Minor (1:14)
28. No. 5 in E Major (1:38)
29. No. 6 in C-Sharp Major (0:57)
30. No. 7 in C-Sharp Minor (2:26)
31. No. 8 in B-Flat Major (1:25)
32. No. 9 in D Minor (1:15)
33. No. 10. in G Major (0:32)
34. No. 11 in B Minor (1:17)
35. No. 12 in E Major (2:31)
36. No. 13 in B Major (0:38)
37. No. 14 in G-Sharp Minor (1:20)
38. No. 15 in A-Flat Major (1:16)
39. No. 16 in C-Sharp Minor (1:07)
40. No. 1. Intermezzo in A Minor (1:50)
41. No. 2. Intermezzo in A Major (6:40)
42. No. 3. Ballade in G Minor (3:32)
43. No. 4. Intermezzo in F Minor (2:29)
44. No. 5. Romanze in F Major (4:31)
45. No. 6. Intermezzo in E-Flat Minor (6:10)
Critical acclaim for Jonathan Plowright's two previous discs in his series of Brahms's works for solo piano includes distinctions such as '10/10' on the website Classics Today and top marks in Diapason as well as 'Instrumental Choice of the Month' in BBC Music Magazine. On his third disc Plowright presents the listener with two seemingly contradictory aspects of Johannes Brahms: the deeply serious, emotionally charged, but also meticulously constructed late Piano Pieces of Op. 118 and their precursor Op. 76 appear side by side with the unapologetic extroversion and scintillating verve of most (if not all) of the 16 Waltzes Op. 39, and the flamboyant Variations on a Hungarian Melody. Brahms's fascination with Hungarian gypsy music stemmed from his friendship with the violinist Eduard Reményi, and found an outlet in several works, among which the Hungarian Dances are probably the most famous. The composer was also a friend and admirer of Johann Strauss II, and in his Op. 39 trespassed with great success into the domains of Vienna's 'Waltz King'. It is tempting to think that Brahms early experience as a pianist in taverns and restaurants induced him to compose this sophisticated light music, but there were also commercial reasons: he composed the waltzes for piano four hands and subsequently made no less than two arrangements for solo piano of the entire set.
I have a feeling this is going to be the benchmark Brahms survey for some time to come. GRAMOPHONE EDITOR'S CHOICE --Gramophone, Feb '16
|
|