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Monday, April 6, 2026

Manolis Kalomiris - Complete Works for Piano Solo (Olivier Chauzu)


Information

Composer: Manolis Kalomiris
  • Ballade No. 1 in E Minor
  • Ballade No. 2 in A-Flat Major
  • Ballade No. 3 in E-Flat Minor
  • Rhapsody No. 1
  • Rhapsody No. 2 "Chant à la nuit"
  • 5 Preludes
  • Nocturne
  • Patinadha (Serenade)
  • Ya ta hellinopoula (For Greek Children), Vols, 1-3
  • Anatoliki zografia (Oriental Picture)

Olivier Chauzu, piano
Date: 2017
Label: Grand Piano

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Review

Manolis Kalomiris stands as the composer-statesman of Greek music. Nationalism laid an unshakeable grip on his shoulder. He did not seek to espouse other countries' styles although quite naturally other strains do emerge, especially among the earlier works. His Greek credentials were no obstacle to his adoption of non-Greek forms such as the Ballade, Prelude, Rhapsody and Symphony as the channels for what he had to say.

His early piano music bears signs picked up during his scholar years in Vienna. An admiration for Liszt, Chopin and Tchaikovsky is there to be noticed in the romantic throes of the three Ballades. Revisions in the 1930s and 1950s did little to attenuate that. The exciting Third Ballade heaves and lays about it with dark-fisted determination. It may be that the 1958 revisions injected the colourful rainbow spray of notes around 1:40. The Nocturne looks forward as an augury of the later folksong style. The Patinada comes closest to salon fodder but even here Kalomiris finds himself introducing quietly swirling figures. The Anatoliki Zografia revels in the turbulent passions of the Ballades but also looks forward to the folksong element.

Twenty years later - in fact from around the time he completed his First Symphony, Levendia - the more impressionistic Rhapsodies show emphatically more folk-nationalistic strata. The second of them, with its allusive nocturnal title, takes us into the sort of misty fragile territory also occupied by Griffes, Baines and Szymanowski. The First Rhapsody is dedicated to José Iturbi. The Five Preludes, written on the brink of World War II and all of them short, assert a range of emotional material from the suggestive lacework of No. 2, to the Rachmaninov-like turmoil of No. 1 and pesante stomp of No. 5. There's a folksy, Kodály-style, peacock-fan brilliance and melody at play as well.

The three volumes of Ya Ta Hellinopoula (For Greek Children) were written throughout his life and comprise eleven very short miniatures. They are not written for children to play but belong among the literature that conjures nostalgic visions of childhood. They permitted him to patter through and ring out the nationalist folksong element which found out-and-out expression among his piano music in the Rhapsodies.

Naxos has two Kalomiris orchestral albums in its Greek Classics series. There's the Third Symphony and a programme that includes orchestrations of the two piano Rhapsodies. In addition, Koch International issued a recording of his Symphony No. 1 Levendia (1921) in which Bruno Fidetzis conducted the Sofia State Philharmonic Orchestra and Bulgarian Nation Choir. His other two symphonies date from 1931 and 1955.

Olivier Chauzu is a dedicated musician, willing to surrender his skills and sympathies to advocate the music of composers whose reputations have been washed away by time or compromised by clouds of inimical witnesses. He has recorded piano music by Louis Aubert (GP648) and Gustave Samazeuilh for Grand Piano and Emile Goué for Azur Classical. Chauzu trained at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique in Paris, studying with Gabriel Tacchino, Théodore Paraskivesko, Jean-Claude Pennetier and György Sebök. At other times he was taught by Leon Fleisher, Vitaly Margoulis and Dimitri Bashkirov.

The recording choices made by the GP team are unlikely to dismay you. Chauzu is afforded warmth, clarity and room for the more clamant moments to expand.

Everything is laid out with satisfying typographical clarity in the booklet and there's an indulgently detailed six-page essay in English and French by Gérald Hugon.

— Rob Barnett

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Manolis Kalomiris (14 December 1883 – 3 April 1962) was a leading Greek composer and founder of the country's national music school. Born in Smyrna, he studied in Constantinople and Vienna, later teaching in Kharkov before settling in Athens. Influenced by Richard Wagner and Russian nationalist composers, he created a distinctly Greek musical identity rooted in folk traditions and modern literature. He was founder of major institutions, including the Hellenic Conservatory and the National Conservatoire, and composed symphonies, operas and concert works, while also serving in prominent cultural and academic roles.

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Olivier Chauzu (born 18 December 1963) is a Franco-Spanish classical pianist. He studied at Conservatories in Bordeaux and Paris with leading teachers such as Dimitri Bashkirov, Leon Fleisher and Paul Badura-Skoda. Recognition came through major competitions, including the Maria Canals International Competition. Chauzu has performed worldwide with major orchestras and is particularly noted for interpretations of French and Spanish composers such as Debussy, Albéniz and Granados. He has also recorded extensively, championed contemporary music, and holds a doctorate in Spanish literature.

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