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Faure Quartet: Pictures at an Exhibition; Etudes-Tableaux
Fauré Quartet
Faure Quartet: Pictures at an Exhibition; Etudes-Tableaux
Genre: Classical
 
Its the Roaring Twenties. That musical jack-of-all-trades, Sergei Koussevitsky, Director of Music with the Boston Symphony Orchestra for twenty-five years, commissions the orchestration of two world-famous works: Pictures ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Fauré Quartet
Title: Faure Quartet: Pictures at an Exhibition; Etudes-Tableaux
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Brilliant Classics
Release Date: 10/12/2018
Genre: Classical
Style: Chamber Music
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 885470011165

Synopsis

Product Description
Its the Roaring Twenties. That musical jack-of-all-trades, Sergei Koussevitsky, Director of Music with the Boston Symphony Orchestra for twenty-five years, commissions the orchestration of two world-famous works: Pictures at an Exhibition by Modest Mussorgsky and the etudes-Tableaux by Sergey Rachmaninoff. And who does Koussevitsky choose for this task? Why, none other than the two great composers Maurice Ravel and Ottorino Respighi. Their orchestrations lay the foundations for numerous other arrangements of those works. More than 80 years later, Dirk Mommertz, a member of and pianist with the Faure Quartett, has arranged both of these works anew this time for piano quartet. A chamber music ensemble, with piano and strings, is ideally suited to present the entire tonal spectrum, explains Dirk Mommertz. Violinist Erika Geldsetzer, violist Sascha Frombling, cellist Konstantin Heidrich and Mommertz at the piano have been an entity for over 25 years now and are justifiably acknowledged as one of the most influential piano quartets in the world. They are renowned for branching out into new territory; they are not afraid of leaving the well-trodden path, so it comes as no surprise that the Faure Quartett have recorded for the first time their own arrangements of Pictures at an Exhibition and the etudes-Tableaux on one album. The mesh of relationships which binds Mussorgskys composition of 1874 and Rachmaninoffs of 1911-1918 with Koussevitskys commissions to Ravel and Respighi, now ends 150 years later with the Faure Quartett in the 21st century. The versions for piano quartet bring to the works an unexpected palette of colors. They are flexible, yet dense; more tangible than when played by a whole orchestra, yet none the less thrilling works possessing unique soul and intense coloring, with as-yet-unheard facets and turns; works that exhibit great spans of upheaval and fading tranquility.