Album info

Album-Release:
2011

HRA-Release:
02.09.2011

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Ballade No. 1 in G minor, Op. 2309:36
  • 2I. Allegro05:19
  • 3II. Adagio04:51
  • 4III. Allegro assai05:37
  • 5China Gates05:45
  • 6For Those Silenced02:04
  • 7Berceuse, Op. 20, No. 504:06
  • 8Distances03:21
  • 9Lieder ohne Worte (Songs without Words), Book 1, Op. 19b: No. 1 in E major, Op. 19b, No. 104:06
  • 10Lieder ohne Worte (Songs without Words), Book 6, Op. 67: No. 34 in C major, Op. 67, No. 4, Spinnerlied01:52
  • 116 Preludes, Op. 6: No. 2. —01:33
  • 12Night Shift09:26
  • 13Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9, No. 204:48
  • 14Nocturne No. 8 in D flat major, Op. 27, No. 206:01
  • Total Runtime01:08:25

Info for Barefoot

Chopin's G Minor Ballade is a superb example of the elevated sonorous music the composer created for his instrument.... The Ballade begins with one of the most compelling introductions possible: the hands, in single notes an octave apart, stride urgently from low bass to high treble for three measures, whisper provocatively for two bars, then, finally in chords, evoke the ultimate anticipation with a superbly placed dissonance that melts into the austerely lyric main theme.... The no-technical-holds-barred coda was to become the signature of all but one of Chopin's four Ballades.

Joanne's album takes us from the fiery brilliance of the coda of the G Minor Ballade to the pristine airiness of the opening of Mozart s Sonata, K 332. This magical transition feels like the pianist invites us into a warm haven after rescuing us from the thunder and lightning of a raging storm. Mozart offers a small storm of his own, however, in the course of the first part of the simple F Major main theme: he throws an unexpected D Minor thunderbolt.... Mozartean charm is fine, but Mozartean brilliance appeals to the inner firebrand, and Joanne revels in the movement's exuberant virtuosic demands.

Moving from 18th-century formal grace to 20th-century Minimalism... John Adams' China Gates provides a refreshing transition.... China Gates provides five-and-a-half minutes of hypnotic relaxation. In For Those Silenced, Mark Carlson ruminates in an improvisatory manner, with one foot in a kind of sophisticated jazz, the other in Impressionism. Josef Hofmann's Berceuse takes Chopin as a guiding light.... Joanne's extraordinary ability to capture the gentle essence of this lullaby might likely have won the praise of Hofmann himself. Meyer Kupferman's... Distances, full of deliciously altered chords, alternates between moody and placid with but one tiny outburst. Distances leaves me wanting more.... Like all of Mendelssohn's compositions for the keyboard, the Songs Without Words are wonderfully pianistic.... The first, with the greeting card title 'Sweet Remembrance' ... has indeed aroused the faithful to prayerful song.... Joanne moves next to the whirlwind Spinning Song, which is in fact a scherzo. Robert Muczynski's... Op. 6, No.2 contains a persuasive musical kernel that begins with a simple persistent bass that supports a figure in high treble that unfolds repeatedly with only slight variation. The piece's brevity is somewhat disarming; remember that Chopin called his preludes little bits, proving that size is not important.

Muczynski studied in Chicago with Alexander Tcherepnin. Like Hofmann, Muczynski concertizes actively as a pianist, playing the standard repertory as well as his own works. Night Shift by Gernot Wolfgang is a small poignant tone poem for your imagination and for the piano.... Night Shift contains subtle rhythmic energy more common in jazz bars in the wee small hours, and it also hints at Wolfgang's background as a composer of serious concert music. It begins with an improvisational motif that reappears somewhat disguised midway through the work, and then returns at the end. The many pauses during the course of this music pique the imagination and give added soul to a soulful piece.... The two [Chopin] Nocturnes on Joanne's program occupy a special place in pianists' hearts. The E-Flat, Op. 9, No.2 may be the most familiar to us, but that doesn't detract from its simple attractiveness. The less familiar D-Flat Nocturne, Op. 27, No. 2 captures titular moonlight, and gripping tension which Chopin creates through harmonic means and the beauty of his gorgeous ornamentation. This one is a true gem. (Orrin Howard)

Joanne Pearce Martin

Currently enjoying her 9th season as the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s Principal Keyboardist, Joanne Pearce Martin performs with the orchestra on multiple keyboard instruments including the celesta, various synthesizers, and occasionally a Mac computer, in addition to the ubiquitous piano. Born in Allentown, PA, Ms. Martin performs all over the world as soloist, chamber musician, and recording artist. With the L.A. Phil., she has made numerous solo appearances on piano, harpsichord, and the Walt Disney Concert Hall organ, appearing with such conductors as Esa-Pekka Salonen, John Adams, and Miguel Harth-Bedoya. She is also a frequent soloist with the LA Phil during the summer Hollywood Bowl seasons. A graduate of the Curtis Institute of Music, she has been guest soloist with many other orchestras in the U.S and abroad, including the Philadelphia Orchestra, Charlotte Symphony, L.A. Chamber Orchestra, San Diego Chamber Orchestra, Florida West Coast Symphony, and England’s Huddersfield Philharmonic. In great demand as a collaborative artist, she has performed with such artists as Joshua Bell, Lynn Harrell, Iona Brown, James Galway, Jean-Pierre Rampal, & Joseph Silverstein, among others.

Ms. Martin has performed at dozens of summer music festivals and concert series spanning four continents, including those in Aspen, Sarasota, Park City, Utah, New York’s 92nd St. Y, Carnegie Recital Hall, Lincoln Center Library, Kennedy Center, Costa Rica, Australia, Taiwan, Edinburgh, Cologne, and Nice. Southern California audiences have followed her performances of New Music and “standards” for years with the L.A. Phil’s Green Umbrella and Chamber Music Series, Camerata Pacifica, Pacific Serenades, Dilijan, South Bay Chamber Music Society, Strawberry Creek, Ojai, Mainly Mozart, and San Louis Obispo Mozart Festivals.

This season Joanne and her husband Gavin Martin have continued to concertize together as a 2-piano team. She has also performed multiple-piano works with Emmanuel Ax, Yefim Bronfman, Helene Grimaud, and Jeffrey Kahane. Her playing has been described by the Los Angeles Times as possessing “unusual fervor and fluency.” She has performed on all the major U.S. television networks and recorded commercially for Centaur, Summit, and Albany records, as well as the Yamaha Disklavier Piano. Ms. Martin has also been the subject of a half-hour feature on The Learning Channel. Her latest recording project, a solo CD entitled “Joanne Pearce Martin, Barefoot”, was recently released on Yarlung Records to critical acclaim. Ms. Martin’s playing of Beethoven’s Triple Concerto can be heard on the soundtrack of DreamWorks’ “The Soloist”, starring Jamie Foxx. Her newest and certainly freshest musical adventure is playing the Theremin – she is now the proud owner of a Moog “Etherwave Pro”, and is looking forward to sharing it with her Piano Spheres audience on this recital.

When she’s not making music, you might find Joanne up in the air – she is an instrument-rated airplane pilot and master-rated skydiver

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