Medtner & Rachmaninov Alexander Paley

Cover Medtner & Rachmaninov

Album info

Album-Release:
2016

HRA-Release:
21.01.2016

Label: La Musica

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Alexander Paley

Composer: Nikolaï Medtner (1880-1951), Sergueï Rachmaninov (1873-1943)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Sonate No. 1 en La Mineur Reminiscenza, Op. 38 17:14
  • 2 Sonate en Sol Mineur, Op. 22 22:03
  • 3 Thème 01:37
  • 4 Variations I à VIII 06:11
  • 5 Variations IX, X 01:22
  • 6 Variation XI 01:24
  • 7 Variation XII 02:56
  • 8 Variations XIII, XIV, XV 05:42
  • 9 Variation XVI 01:40
  • 10 Variation XVII 01:57
  • 11 Variation XVIII 01:22
  • 12 Variations XIX, XX 03:25
  • 13 Variations XXI 03:36
  • 14 Variation XXII 07:02
  • Total Runtime 01:17:31

Info for Medtner & Rachmaninov

When I moved to New York I had the good fortune to enjoy the affectionate support of Kyriena Siloti, daughter of the great pianist Alexander Siloti, to whom Rachmaninoff dedicated many of his preludes. An old lady by then, she was a very highly regarded piano teacher and I felt very intimidated whenever I went to her house: she would tell me that Sergei Rachmaninoff had sat here on this chair and Nikolai Medtner there on that one. So having the two composers side by side on the same recording is a logical consummation in more ways than one.

Not many people know that Moldavia, my country, was ruled in the 15th century by Voivode Stephen the Great, who was an ancestor of Rachmaninoff. Consequently Moldavians regard Rachmaninoff as a national musician and there is a high school named after him in my home town of Chișinău. His portrait hangs in the rooms in Moscow’s Tchaikovsky Conservatoire where he worked, so it could be said that in a way I studied under him! I wanted to record the Variations on a Theme of Chopin because I simply cannot understand why they are not as well-known as the Variations on a Theme of Corelli. Rachmaninoff obviously had no idea how Chopin actually played, but he was himself the greatest pianist of the recording era. What is particularly striking in his writing is that despite all the difficulties of finger technique it presents, the treatment of the instrument is always completely natural.

Although Medtner’s name is not entirely unknown, his music remains largely unfamiliar. I have had only one occasion to play one of his piano concertos: he wrote three and I was invited by René Koering to play the second at the Festival de Radio France et Montpellier. His life was similar to Chopin’s insofar as it was almost entirely devoted to the piano. Through his origins, he embodies the combination of Russian soul and German spirit. Far be it from me to downplay his melodic skill, but his genius undeniably resides in a very Germanic sense of polyphony. Medtner was as much a philosopher as a musician and I have always been fascinated by his writings, such as his book The Muse and the Fashion as well as his many letters and his diary. I profoundly admire his conception of music: a goddess who is to be served and whose temple one may not enter without having earned the right to do so.

Alexander Paley, piano


Alexander Paley
is widely acclaimed for his dazzling technical prowess, his exceptionally broad and extensive repertoire of concerti and solo piano works, and the depth of his unique and personal interpretations.

The Washington Post called Paley's 1991 debut with the National Symphony a "flawless performance," and since then, he has earned similar accolades for performances with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Boston Pops, Aspen Festival Orchestra, Minnesota Orchestra, and the St. Louis, San Diego, Utah, Colorado, Milwaukee, Seattle, and Syracuse Symphony Orchestras. He made his Carnegie Hall debut with the American Composers Orchestra in the 1996-7 season with the world premier of a new concerto by Sheila Silver, at which time The New York Times wrote: "The pianist … played like a man possessed"

Recital appearances throughout the United States have taken Mr. Paley to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Richmond, Atlanta, the Kennedy Center in Washington DC, Chicago's Allied Arts Series, and the Seattle International Festival. A favorite with audiences in Washington, DC, Mr. Paley gave the first of his now annual recitals in the 1999-2000 season, playing the dedicatory recital for the German embassy's new Bluthner piano and also playing at the Dumbarton Concert Series with a program featuring J.S. Bach's Goldberg Variations and French Suite No.5. The Washington Post review of this recital began: "Once in a while, never often enough, a recital is so exhilarating that it reaches far into the intermission, which becomes a delicious interlude between the lingering vapors of superlative artistry already experienced and the enormous pleasure of knowing there is still more to come". Since that first recital, his annual return to DC has included the complete Mozart Solo Sonatas in 2004 and an "all Liszt concert" that was recorded and heard on WET's "Front Row Washington" in 2011.

Born in Kishiniev, Moldova, Mr.Paley began his piano study at age 6. He gave his first recital at age 13 and at 16, he won the National Music Competition of Moldova. Subsequently, he studied at the Moscow Conservatory with Bella Davidovich and Vera Gornostayeva, completing his graduate work in 1981. He went on to win major awards, including First Prize at the Leipzig International Bach Competition in 1884, the Bosendorfer Prize in 1986, the Grand Prix at the first International Pancho Vladigerov Competition (Bulgaria) in 1986, the Grand Prix Young Artist Debut (New York) in 1988, Prize at Aiex de Vries (Belgium) in 1990, and Les Victoires de la Musique Classique (France) in 2006.

Prior to his defection to the United States in 1988, Mr. Paley performed frequently as a recitalist and soloist throughout the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe and was a featured soloist during numerous tours with the Moscow Virtuosi under Vladimir Spivakov. Mr. Paley now continues to perform extensively throughout Europe, China and South America, including concerti performances with orchestras including the Orchestre National de France, the MDR Orchestra, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Orchestre Philharmonique Monte Carlo, Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra, Latvian National Symphony Orchestra, Ensemble Orchestre de Paris, and Montreal Symphony. Conductors he has played with include Myung-Whun Chung, Ivan Fisher, Marin Alsop, Zdenek Macal, Lawrence Foster, Peter Ruzicka, and Jean-Claude Casadesus, among others.

His recital appearances include Radio France, Theatre des Champs-Elysees, Salle Pleyel, Salle Gaveau (Paris), the Grands Interprètes series (Lyon), Lille Piano Festival, Opera Theatre of Besançon, and in other cities including Montpellier, Nancy, Metz, Bourges, Amiens (France), Leipzig Gewandhaus, Concertgebouw (Amsterdam), Laeiszhalle (Hamburg), The Forbidden City Concert Hall (Beijing, China), Linz and Vienna (Austria), and many locations in Germany.

Mr. Paley has partnered eminent artists such as Bella Davidovich, Mstislav Rostropovich, and Vladimir Spivakov, and has performed chamber music with important ensembles, including the Vermeer, Ysaye, and the Fine Arts string quartets, as well as with principal players from major orchestras, including the MDR Leipzig Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic, and the Montpellier Philharmonic.

The year 2011 marked the 20th anniversary of Mr. Paley's festival at the Moulin d'Ande in Normandy, France. This festival, a week-long series of recitals, lieder, and chamber music concerts, has become a highlight of the season for many French music lovers. It has been the subject of an hour-long documentary by Russian television, which has been broadcast thoughout Eastern Europe, as well as Israel. As part of the festival, in 1997, Mr. Paley made his conducting debut with performances of Pergolesi's La Serva Padrone and Telemann's Pimpinone at the Theatre of Evreux Scene National in France. Since then, he has conducted and played the compelete J.S. Bach Concerti for solo pianos, two, three, and four pianos; the complete Mozart Concerti for solo piano, two, and three pianos; the complete Beethoven piano concerti; Mendelssohn Concerti for piano solo with the Ensemble Orchestre de Paris; and conducted Verdi's La Traviata at the National Opera of Moldova. In addition, Mr. Paley has a yearly festival in Richmond,Virginia (USA), which has drawn both popular and critical acclaim for its bold programming and brilliant performances since its creation in 1998.

Mr. Paley has made numerous recordings of a wide range of works, including the complete solo piano works of Balakirev (E.S.S.A.Y), works by Scriabin and Weber (Naxos), cello and piano sonatas by Chopin and Rachmaninoff (with cellist Alexandre Dmitriev) (Accord), the Liszt transcription of Beethoven's Septour (Musidisc), the world premier recording of Giovanni Sgambati's piano concerto with the Orchestre Philharmonique Montpellier (Actes Sud Musicales), a 1994 recording of Anton Rubinstein's Piano Concerti No.2 and No.4 with the Russian State Orchestra, a 2003 recording of the Sheila Silver piano concerto with the Lithuanian State Symphony Orchestra conducted by G. Rinkevičius (Naxos), a recording of works by Jean-Louis Agobet with the Pro Philharmonique Orchestre of Strasbourg (Timpani). Mr. Paley has recorded a series of CDs on the Bluthner label, including 10 pieces of Romeo and Juliet and Two Suites from Cinderella by Prokofiev, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms und Bartel, Chopin, Bach: Goldberg Variations, Bach: the Well-Tempered Clavier as well as a DVD titled "Bluthner soiree with Alexander Paley", featuring Schubert/Liszt Song Tanscriptions (live performance) from Leipzig. His last releases include both Enesco cello sonatas with cellist Alexandre Dmitriev and the complete violin sonatas of Enesco with violinist Amiram Ganz (Label Saphir), and Tchaikowsky's Grand Sonata in G major and complete Seasons (Label Aparté).

Booklet for Medtner & Rachmaninov

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