On the other site, links are now available again.
Thank you all for your patience.
Happy New Year!

Tuesday, July 2, 2024

Pancho Vladigerov - Impressions; Suite Bulgare (Etsuko Hirose)


Information

Composer: Pancho Vladigerov
  • Impressions, Op. 9
  • Suite Bulgare, Op. 21
  • Trois morceaux de piano, Op. 15: I. Prélude

Etsuko Hirose, piano
Date: 2021
Label: Mirare

-----------------------------------------------------------

Review

While it can’t be said that many of us have been waiting impatiently for recordings of music by Bulgaria’s No. 1 composer, Pancho Vladigerov, it’s still good news that two have come along within a relatively short space of time. Etsuko Hirose’s choice ranges wider than Nadejda Vlaeva’s (on Hyperion, reviewed last August); both include all ten Impressions from 1920, but Hirose has the edge by offsetting them against the Bulgarian Suite of 1926, where the proud C major ‘Alla marcia’ and the 5/4 and 7/4 elements show us the proud nationalist rather than the impressionistic cosmopolitan. Vlaeva has a mercurial touch better suited to the chronicle of a love affair, the Gershwin/Hollywood improvisational feel, while Hirose emphasises the Scriabin influence and taps the emotional depth for the elegiac end of a romance.

I learnt much, too, from Hirose’s well-researched note, telling us among other things that the composer’s mother was Russian-Jewish – Shostakovich raved about his Jewish Poem of 1950, that his twin brother was a distinguished violinist and that Max Reinhardt, for whose Berlin theatre Vladigerov wrote incidental music, wanted him to go to America with him. The composer’s fate would have been very different – he survived the Second World War in Bulgaria – and his output maybe less diverse.

-- David NiceBBC Music Magazine

-----------------------------------------------------------

Pancho Vladigerov (13 March 1899 – 8 September 1978) was a Bulgarian composer, pedagogue and pianist. He is arguably the most influential Bulgarian composer of all time, and was one of the first to successfully combine Bulgarian folk music and classical music. Vladigerov marked the beginning of a number of genres in Bulgarian music, including violin sonata and piano trio. He was also a very respected pedagogue; his students include practically all notable Bulgarian composers of the next generation, such as Alexander Raichev, Alexander Yossifov, Stefan Remenkov, and many others, as well as the pianist Alexis Weissenberg.

***

Etsuko Hirose (born 1979 in Nagoya) is a Japanese classical pianist. She studied at the École Normale de Musique de Paris with Germaine Mounier, then joined the Conservatoire national supérieur de musique et de danse with Bruno Rigutto and Nicholas Angelich as professors. Hirose later perfected her skills with Marie-Françoise Bucquet, Jorge Chaminé and Alfred Brendel. In 1997, she won first prize in the Martha Argerich competition, which marked the beginning of her solo career. Hirose then returned to Japan. Since 2008, she has been living in France again and regularly returns to Japan to give recitals.

-----------------------------------------------------------

FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

1 comment:

  1. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    Guide for Linkvertise: 'Free Access with Ads' --> 'Get [Album name]' --> 'I'm interested' --> 'Explore Website / Learn more' --> close the newly open tab/window, then wait for a few seconds --> 'Get [Album name]'

    https://link-target.net/610926/vladigerov-impressions
    or
    https://uii.io/SjRRQOxv
    or
    https://exe.io/9peLrxc9

    ReplyDelete