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The Art of Lang Lang Franz LISZT (1811-1886) Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in c-charp minor [9:05]
Liebestraum, S. 541 No. 3 [5:46] Peter TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) Piano Concerto No. 1 in b-flat minor Op. 23 Allegro
con fuoco [7:18] Lu WENCHENG (1898-1981) Autumn Moon on a Calm Lake (arr. Chen Peixun) [4:08] Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856) Kinderszenen Op. 15: Traumerei [3:18] Frederic CHOPIN (1810-1849) Nocturne in D-flat Op. 27 No. 2 (Live) [6:41]
Piano Sonata No. 3 in b minor Op. 58 Finale. Presto non
tanto [5:29] Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) Piano Sonata in C, K330 Allegro moderato [6:35] Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873-1943) Piano Concerto No. 2 in c minor, Op. 18 Adagio sostenuto [12:27]
Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini, Op. 43, variation 18 [2:49] Lang LANG and Lang GUO-REN Horses [2:52]
Yellow River Piano Concerto: Prelude: The song of the Yellow
River Boatmen [3:30]
Lang Lang
(piano)
Orchestras, conductors, and recording venues not given DEUTSCHE
GRAMMOPHON 442 9484 [69:48]
I must
say I’m not quite sure what to make of this release. In perusals
of the websites of both Lang Lang and Deutsche
Grammophon, there is no mention of this disc,
put out hot on the heels of Lang Lang’s recording of two
of Beethoven’s
piano concertos (4776719). Lang Lang’s technical and artistic
prowess certainly wowed audiences here in Indianapolis. This
reviewer
was very much impressed not only by the performance of Mozart’s
17th Piano Concerto with the Indianapolis Philharmonic,
but also with the encores and his off-stage approachability.
He spoke of the first time he heard the Liszt (presented
on this disc) on a Tom and Jerry cartoon, and in interviews
with local media of the pet starling Mozart and the connection
of its song with the Mozart piece; sadly not included on
this disc. Of the artists I’ve heard and met, he is wonderfully
charming and has talent to burn.
Here, we
have the first release in Lang Lang’s discocgraphy that looks
backward. Not that that’s a bad thing at all, considering
his achievements and rapid rise. Packaged more like a pop
record than just about anything I’ve seen in the classical
sphere, this disc shows Lang Lang’s appeal in a wide-ranging
sample of his previous output, all very well recorded and
spectacularly performed. The Beethoven, which is superbly
played, appears, sadly, to have been too recently released
to see inclusion on this disc. The playing is spectacular,
from what some would call the old warhorses to the pieces
that Lang Lang arranged and has presented to an international
audience for the first time. These include the Yellow River
Piano Concerto (from his release Dragon Songs) and Horses, from
his disc recorded live at Carnegie Hall. Also very pleasant
is Autumn Moon on a Calm Lake, which is blissfully
tranquil and sensitively played. It could be Schumann shone
through an Asian lens.
The trouble
is that it’s only a sampler. There are shorter pieces here,
but multi-movement works such as Tchaikovsky’s first piano
concerto and Mozart’s piano sonata K330 only get one movement
apiece, and Rachmaninov’s Paganini is represented
by only variation 18. For those willing actually to search
around through the back catalogue, one can figure out the
recording dates, conductors and orchestras for these performances,
but they get no credit here. All eyes are toward the soloist.
In short,
this is a wonderful introduction to a spectacular artist,
and it’s wonderful that this might be the entrée for younger
audiences to gain access to the wonderful world of classical
music, but for those responsible for the presentation of
the material, please give the artists (for there certainly
are more than one present on this disc) their due as well.
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