Sorabji: Toccata Seconda Per Pianoforte

 
Sorabji: Toccata Seconda Per Pianoforte cover
$52.00 Out of Stock
2-4 weeks
add to cart

KHAIKOSRU SORABJI
Sorabji: Toccata Seconda Per Pianoforte
Abel Sánchez-Aguilera (piano)

[ Piano Classics / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Tuesday 10 March 2020

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

Khaikosru Sorabji (1892-1988) is one of the most enigmatic and controversial 20-th century composers. Largely self-taught he chose his own way, never fitting into any school or movement, his style is highly idiosyncratic, inspired by late-romantics like Busoni and Szymanowski. Characteristic for his piano music are the enormous proportions and textural density of his works, some of them lasting several hours in performance, taxing the performer and audience to the utmost.

Sorabji shared with several composers of the older generation (particularly Busoni and Reger) a deep admiration for the music of J.S.Bach and an interest in the revival of Baroque forms, adapted to the modern aesthetics and idioms. This resulted in numerous piano transcriptions of Bach's works and, on the other hand, in adopting traditional compositional procedures such as the variation (passacaglia, chorale prelude) and the fugue. Within this context, Busoni and Sorabji also produced innovative examples of multisectional toccatas. Sorabji regarded Busoni's Toccata: Preludio, Fantasia, Ciaccona as one of the most significant works of his time and as the main model for his own toccatas.

Toccata seconda consists of nine movements representing Sorabji's favourite genres: forms of Baroque inspiration (chorale prelude, passacaglia, fugue), free fantasies and fast sections in perpetual motion style, and his idiosyncratic slow movements ("tropical" nocturne and polyphonic aria). It is therefore an admirable synthesis of Sorabji's style, distilled into a relatively compact format.

Spanish pianist Abel Sánchez-Aguilera is one of Spain's foremost interpreters of 20th century music. He won First prize in the 2015 Scriabin Competition in

Salzburg. He has given performances of Scriabin's complete sonatas, the Spanish première of Sorabji's Toccata seconda and the first performance of this work in the UK since its prèmiere in 1936. He has prepared critical editions of several of Sorabji's unpublished manuscripts (Piano Symphonies nos. 0, 1 and 3).