Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Opp. 31 & 49 Maurizio Pollini

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2014

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
13.11.2014

Label: Deutsche Grammophon (DG)

Genre: Instrumental

Subgenre: Piano

Interpret: Maurizio Pollini

Komponist: Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

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  • 1 1. Allegro vivace 05:52
  • 2 2. Adagio grazioso 08:53
  • 3 3. Rondo (Allegretto) 05:21
  • 4 1. Largo - Allegro 07:59
  • 5 2. Adagio 07:13
  • 6 3. Allegretto 05:56
  • 7 1. Allegro 07:19
  • 8 2. Scherzo (Allegretto vivace) 04:42
  • 9 3. Menuetto (Moderato e grazioso) 03:45
  • 10 4. Presto con fuoco 04:15
  • 11 1. Andante 03:56
  • 12 2. Rondo (Allegro) 03:00
  • 13 1. Allegro ma non troppo 04:06
  • 14 2. Tempo di Menuetto 03:03
  • Total Runtime 01:15:20

Info zu Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Opp. 31 & 49

Ein bemerkenswertes Vermächtnis auf dem gelben Label des am längsten für Deutsche Grammophon tätigen Exklusivkünstlers. Fast vierzig Jahre sind vergangen, seit Maurizio Pollini seine ersten Studioaufnahmen von Beethovens Sonaten machte. Seine Interpretationen der Klavierwerke op. 109 und 110 für Deutsche Grammophon standen am Anfang einer außergewöhnlichen künstlerischen Reise. Am 17. November endet sie. Mit der Veröffentlichung der Sonaten op. 31 und 49 finalisiert der große italienische Pianist seinen Beethoven-Zyklus. Zweifellos wird das Album, das 2013 und '14 im Münchner Herkulessaal entstand, im Pantheon der wichtigsten Klavieraufnahmen seinen Platz finden.

Maurizio Pollini,Klavier


Maurizio Pollini
was born in 1942 and studied with Carlo Lonati and Carlo Vidusso. After winning First Prize at the 1960 Warsaw Chopin Competition, he went on to establish an international career of the greatest importance, performing in the world’s major concert halls and working with the most distinguished orchestras and conductors including Karl Boehm, Herbert von Karajan, Claudio Abbado, Pierre Boulez, and Riccardo Muti. He was awarded the Vienna Philharmonic Ehrenring in 1987 after performing the Beethoven concertos in New York, the Ernst-von-Siemens Music Prize in Munich in 1966, the ‘A Life for Music – Arthur Rubinstein’ Prize in Venice in 1999 and the Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli Prize in Milan in 2000.

In 1995 Maurizio Pollini opened the Festival that Tokyo dedicated to Pierre Boulez and, in the same year, he devised and performed in his own concert series at the Salzburg Festival. He gave similar concert series in New York at Carnegie Hall, in Paris for la Cité de la Musique,Tokyo, and in Rome at the Parco della Musica. The programmes included both chamber and orchestral performances and mirrored his wide musical tastes from Gesualdo and Monteverdi to the present. In summer 2004 he was the ‘Artist Etoile’ at the International Festival Lucerne, performing a recital and concerts with orchestra conducted by Claudio Abbado and Pierre Boulez.

Maurizio Pollini’s repertoire ranges from Bach to contemporary composers (including première performances of Manzoni, Nono and Sciarrino) and includes the complete Beethoven Sonatas, which he has performed in Berlin, Munich, Milan, New York, London, Vienna and Paris. He has recorded works from the classical, romantic and contemporary repertoire to worldwide critical acclaim. His recordings of the complete works for piano by Schoenberg, and of works by Berg, Webern, Manzoni, Nono, Boulez and Stockhausen, are a testament to his great passion for music of the 20th century. Most recently Maurizio Pollini was responsible for the commissioning of the expansion of the original Grido (String Quartet No.3) by Helmut Lachenmann - a pupil of Nono - into Double (Grido II) for a 48-strong string orchestra.

In 2007 Pollini was awarded a Grammy for best Instrumental Soloist Performance and the Disco d’Oro; he received the 2006 Echo Award in Germany, and the Choc de la Musique, Victoires de la Musique and Diapason d’Or de l’Année in France. Most recently he won the Echo Klassik award in the Best Concerto category for his recording of the Brahms First Piano Concerto with Christian Thielemann and the Staatskapelle Dresden.

In 2010 Pollini performed the Chopin Birthday Recital on the anniversary of the composer’s birth in the International Piano Series in London as part of the Chopin 200 celebrations and last season he played a highly successful series of five recitals in the Piano Series at the Royal Festival Hall - The Pollini Project – charting the development of piano music from Bach to Boulez, for which he won the prestigious Royal Philharmonic Society Instrumentalist award.

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