The peerless András Schiff in his first recital recording of Janacek’s piano music. The "story-telling " piano pieces chosen by Schiff can be closely related to Bartók’s "Mikrokosmos" and have a similarly timeless appeal. As writer Rob Cowan notes, "No matter how many times you listen to these gems, the sum effect of emotional engagement, wonderment and love of life is as lasting as one’s admiration for the music’s miniaturist construction. They are truly ‘the world in a grain of sand’."
Leoš Janáček - A Recollection
András Schiff
- In the mists / Im Nebel
-
- 2II.04:26
- 3III.02:57
- 4IV.04:18
- Sonata 1.X.1905
- 5The presentiment / Die Ahnung - Con moto05:03
- 6The death / Der Tod - Adagio08:17
- On an overgrown path I / Auf verwachsenem Pfade I
- 7Our evenings / Unsere Abende - Moderato03:23
- 8A blown away leaf / Ein verwehtes Blatt - Andante02:56
- 9Come with us! / Kommt mit! - Andante01:16
- 10The Madonna of Frýdek / Die Friedeker Mutter Gottes - Grave03:37
- 11They chattered like swallows / Sie schwatzten wie die Schwalben - Con moto02:05
- 12Words fail! / Es stockt das Wort! - Andante01:48
- 13Good night! / Gute Nacht! - Andante03:03
- 14Unutterable anguish / So namenlos bange - Andante03:21
- 15In tears / In Tränen - Lerghetto02:34
- 16The barn owl has not flown away! / Das Käuzchen ist nicht fortgeflogen! - Andante04:11
- On an overgrown path II / Auf verwachsenem Pfade I
- 17I. Andante03:33
- 18II. Allegretto03:34
- On an overgrown path (Paralipomena) / Auf verwachsenem Pfade (Paralipomena)
- 19I. Più mosso02:34
- 20II. Allegro06:05
- 21III. Vivo02:01
- 22A recollection / Eine Erinnerung - Con moto
01:08
Robert Cowan, writing in the CD booklet for the present release, also emphasises the life-affirming qualities of Janácek's piano music: "No matter how many times you listen to these gems, the sum effect of emotional engagement, wonderment and love of life is as lasting as one's admiration for the music's miniaturist construction. They are truly "the world in a grain of sand". Trawling the repertory for piano masterpieces from roughly the same period, only Bartók's gnomic "ethno-narratives" (Out of Doors, Bagatelles, selected pieces from Mikrokosmos, etc) can claim anything like equal musical status. Janácek's piano music anticipates the compressed keyboard tone poetry of such feted modern masters as György Kurtág and Arvo Pärt. They are, for the most part, honest fragments of personal biography, utterly uncompromising and securely grounded in the land of their birth. There is nothing contrived about them, absolutely no empty striving for effect, and yet their force of utterance is formidable. They confirm the mastery of a creative force who was, by turns, afflicted or infatuated by life." And definitively Czech: "His was an unlikely voice to represent a cultural identity for Czechoslovakia", the BBC Music Magazine remarked recently, "but it was an unlikely nation. The accent of Janácek's music is peculiar, the distinctive sound is somewhere deep in the provinces of the provinces..."
"In The Mist" (1912) is amongst Janácek's more enigmatic piano works. In a time of emotional crisis, the composer attempts to clarify confused memories and to confront self-doubt. "In The Mist" was composed when Janácek, already almost 60, was trying to come to terms with his apparent failure as a writer of opera, which he regarded as his true calling. (Fame came to Janácek very late, and there was a great upturn in his fortunes after 1920).
"1.X.1905" was written to honour a Czech workman, Frantisek Pavlik, shot during an anti-German demonstration in Brno. Only two movements of this piano sonata now remain but, as Cowan notes, "it still has the power to shock. As with Schubert's Eighth and Bruckner's Ninth Symphonies, its impact seems somehow to have been strengthened by the absence of a finale. The remaining torso stands powerfully on its own terms."
Schiff also plays the complete "On an Overgrown Path" cycle. The pieces of Book I were brought together in 1908; several were conceived originally for harmonium as early 1901/2, while Janácek was also working on the "Jenufa" opera. Moravian folk melodies influence several of the pieces and their titles are also derived in part from Moravian folk poetry. The last three of the Book I compositions allude to the illness and death - at the age of only 21 - of Janácek's daughter, Olga. The tone of the work as a whole is complex: "Janácek's ability to switch mood - sometimes within a mere two or three bars of music - from hopelessness to reconciliation, from rage to despair or affirmation, is unique. One marvels at the music's inherent spontaneity while at the same time admiring the skill of the design."
The album concludes with the tiny "A Recollection", written in 1928, a miniature to rival any of Webern's in its jewelled brilliance.
Liner notes for the present CD also include an open letter to András Schiff by Hungarian writer Imre Kertesz, distinguished author of "Fateless" and "Kaddish for a Child Not Born", works for he received the "Welt" Literature Prize last autumn.
YEAR | DATE | VENUE | LOCATION | |
2025 | June 04 | Tivoli Concert Hall | Copenhagen, Denmark | |
2025 | June 07 | Wigmore Hall | London, United Kingdom | |
2025 | June 09 | Wigmore Hall | London, United Kingdom | |
2025 | June 15 | Filharmonia | Warsaw, Poland | |
2025 | June 17 | Konzerthaus | Vienna, Austria | |
2025 | June 19 | Konzerthaus | Blaibach, Germany | |
2025 | June 21 | Gewandhaus | Leipzig, Germany | |
2025 | June 23 | Klavierfestival Ruhr | Mühlheim, Germany | |
2025 | June 28 | Casals Forum | Kronberg, Germany | |
2025 | June 29 | Casals Forum | Kronberg, Germany | |
2025 | July 03 | Schloß Elmau | Krün, Germany | |
2025 | July 05 | Schloß Elmau | Krün, Germany | |
2025 | October 07 | Wigmore Hall | London, United Kingdom | |
2025 | October 09 | Wigmore Hall | London, United Kingdom | |
2025 | December 18 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany | |
2025 | December 21 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany | |
2025 | December 26 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany | |
2025 | December 29 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany | |
2026 | January 01 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany | |
2026 | January 04 | Pierre Boulez Saal | Berlin, Germany |
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