Julian Rhodes Live

Julian Rhodes Live
JULIAN RHODES LIVE


A piano concert at Lower Pulworthy, Devon
18th April 1998


Colossus Classics CCCD 002


PROGRAMME

Liebeslied
Robert Schumann, arr. Franz Liszt

Threnody: The Cypresses at the Villa d'Este
Franz Liszt

The Goldberg Variations
J.S. Bach
arr. Ferrucio Busoni & Rhodes

Prelude in C
J.S. Bach, arr. Rhodes

Sicilienne
Maria Thérèse von Paradis
arr. Rhodes

Total playing time: 63:37




Programme notes by Julian Rhodes


The Liebeslied by Schumann and the Cypresses by Liszt form a contrasting, complementary pair: music of life, music of death. The tenderness and optimism of young love suffuse the Liebeslied, in which the lover tells his beloved that to him she is everything - his life, his soul, his world. Liszt's arrangement of Schumann's vocal original decks the tender melodies in golden webs of sound. The Threnody by Liszt is a lament for the passing of life. It opens with the solemn tolling of a great funeral bell and proceeds, by way of a haunted, visionary melody, to a resolution at once transcendental and elemental. Liszt wrote it while visiting the Villa d'Este near Rome; its title reminds us that the cypress tree is a symbol of the entrance to the underworld.

The Goldberg Variations began life as a simple dance-tune, a triple-metre Sarabande which Bach wrote in the musical notebook of his wife Anna Magdalena. Later, he returned to this innocent piece and made it the basis of the great 30 variations for harpsichord. As the work unfolds Bach explores a wide range of musical techniques, and in so doing transcends both compositional expertise and architectural mastery; the result is a humanitarian masterwork. Busoni's edition of the score enriches and expands many of the musical textures, making the work sing effectively on the modern piano. I have taken this process a stage further in several places: the work is now like a house, built by Bach, decorated by Busoni, furnished with some of my own effects. The resulting performance happily rejects historical accuracy: nor is it faithful to the elusive 'spirit' of Bach. Rather, it is based on Bach's own score and some of the performance conventions of his time, refracted through the high romanticism of Busoni and coloured by a late 20th-century eclecticism.

The final two works are concert encores. The Bach/Rhodes Prelude in C shows a more light-hearted approach to the art of arrangement, while the Sicilienne by Paradis expands the chaste textures of the original, and in so doing evokes the 'golden age' of late 19th-century pianism.



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Electronic music - Schumann's Liebeslied

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