Recordings
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Rachmaninov: Preludes Op 23
CDA66081
Archive Service; also available on CDS44041/8
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Rachmaninov: The Complete Solo Piano Music
CDS44041/8
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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Rachmaninov: Demidenko plays Rachmaninov
CDH55239
Helios (Hyperion's budget label)
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Vladimir Horowitz – The complete solo European recordings
APR6004
2CDs for the price of 1 — 2CDs Temporarily out of stock
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Details
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No 01 in F sharp minor: Largo
Track 6 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'37]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 02 in B flat major: Maestoso
Track 7 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'36]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 03 in D minor: Tempo di minuetto
Track 8 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'10]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 04 in D major: Andante cantabile
Track 9 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [4'43]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 05 in G minor: Alla marcia
Track 10 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [4'12]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 06 in E flat major: Andante
Track 11 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'46]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 07 in C minor: Allegro
Track 12 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [2'36]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 08 in A flat major: Allegro vivace
Track 13 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'30]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 09 in E flat minor: Presto
Track 14 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [2'00]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
No 10 in G flat major: Largo
Track 15 on CDS44041/8
CD1 [3'58]
8CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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The opening Preludes of Op 23 establish three archetypes for the entire set. The sighing motifs of the slow F sharp minor, No 1, define a tone of melancholy introspection, while the florid arpeggios, indomitable chords and luxuriant final cascades of the fast B flat major, No 2, are redolent of a determination to master any adversity; No 3 in D minor, Tempo di minuetto, mediates between the extremes, its centre of gravity being a restrained neo-classicism that can shade into introversion or extroversion at will. The template established in these three opening Preludes is followed by the next four. No 4 is a Schumannesque song without words (compare the second of Schumann’s Romanzen Op 28), while the famous G minor Alla marcia frames melting lyricism with militant energy; the neo-Baroque phase then has to wait while the sighing lyrical E flat Prelude once again demonstrates Rachmaninov’s mastery of decorative accompaniment. When the maximalized Bachian toccata style of the C minor Prelude No 7 arrives, it does so as a tour de force. The last three Preludes in the Op 23 set are anything but anticlimactic. The A flat major No 8 sticks to its right-hand figuration as tenaciously, yet as resourcefully, as a Chopin Study, while the double notes of the Presto E flat minor are an earthier reincarnation of Liszt’s Feux follets (Will-o’-the-wisps) from the Transcendental Studies. Finally the slow G flat major avoids applause-orientated strategies and instead modestly closes the frame of the opus, reworking the sighs of the opening F sharp minor Prelude.
from notes by David Fanning © 2009