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Hyperion Records

Berceuse in D flat major, Op 57
composer
1843; originally entitled Variantes; published in 1845; dedicated to Mme Elise Gavard
Recordings
Cover of 'Moriz Rosenthal – The complete recordings' (APR7503)
Cover of 'Alfred Cortot – The Late Recordings, Vol. 3 – Chopin & Mendelssohn' (APR5573)
Cover of 'Chopin: Demidenko plays Chopin' (CDH55183)
Cover of 'Chopin: Late Masterpieces' (CDA67764)
Cover of 'Chopin: Piano Sonatas Nos 2 & 3' (CDA67706)
Cover of 'Chopin: Piano Sonatas Nos 2 & 3' (CDA30006)
Cover of 'Chopin: Preludes, Fantaisie & Berceuse' (CDA66324)
Cover of 'Chopin: The Complete Works' (CDS44351/66)
Cover of 'Eileen Joyce – The complete Parlophone & Columbia solo recordings' (APR7502)
Cover of 'Harold Bauer – The complete recordings' (APR7302)
Harold Bauer – The complete recordings
Buy by post £19.98
This album is not yet available for download APR7302  3CDs  
Cover of 'Paderewski – His earliest recordings' (APR6006)
Details
Track 14 on CDS44351/66 CD9 [5'57] 16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Track 1 on CDA30006 [4'27] Hyperion 30th Anniversary series
Track 1 on CDA67706 [4'27]
Track 13 on CDA67764 [4'10]
Track 27 on CDA66324 [4'44] Archive Service Only
Track 6 on CDH55183 [4'18] Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
Track 13 on APR5573 [4'04]
Track 19 on APR6006 CD2 [3'59] 2CDs for the price of 1
Track 16 on APR7302 CD2 [4'04] 3CDs
Track 3 on APR7503 CD2 [4'01] 5CDs
Track 6 on APR7503 CD3 [3'57] 5CDs
Track 15 on APR7502 CD1 [4'20] 5CDs
Berceuse in D flat major, Op 57
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A few months before he completed the B minor Sonata, Chopin put the finishing touches to his Berceuse Op 57. The original title was Variantes, and this describes its final form rather well: a set of sixteen short variations on an ostinato ground (there is a sketch of the work that lays this structure out rather graphically, even numbering the ‘variantes’). Another interesting detail here is that Chopin originally intended to plunge straight into the melody, and only added the two-bar genre-defining introduction at a late stage, quite possibly at the moment he changed the title from Variantes to Berceuse. In some ways the work functions rather like a set of baroque ‘divisions’, but this scarcely does justice to the highly original treatment of the ornamental line. The key point is that the curve of complexity (ever more rapid filigree) remains divorced not just from the underlying harmonic progression (a simple repeating cycle) but also from the dynamic shape (a stable level, remaining in low dynamics throughout). What is original here is that the shape of the music—its sense of departure and return—is created almost entirely through texture and sonority. It is not hard to see why Debussy was so interested in the music of Chopin.

from notes by Jim Samson © 2009

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