Medtner: Incantation, Complete Songs, Vol. 1

Medtner: Incantation, Complete Songs, Vol. 1 cover $20.00 Low Stock add to cart

NIKOLAI MEDTNER
Medtner: Incantation, Complete Songs, Vol. 1
Ekaterina Levental (mezzo-soprano), Frank Peters (piano)

[ Brilliant Classics / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 28 August 2020

Should this item be out of stock at the time of your order, we would expect to be able to supply it to you within 4 - 7 business days.

Medtner's legacy for solo piano is now widely esteemed alongside Rachmaninov and other giants of the Russian 'silver age': melodists to their core, romantics at heart, yet rigorous craftsmen to their fingertips, who took their muse seriously and refined their inspiration to distil a peculiarly Russian spirit of melancholy in sound.

However, around a third of Medtner's output, measured by opus numbers, was dedicated to voices, and this section of his music has received much less attention. Ekaterina Levental has dedicated herself to correcting this imbalance. The Uzbek-born, Dutch-resident mezzo-soprano has given all of Medtner's songs in concert with the pianist Frank Peters; together, they now embark on a recorded cycle.

Medtner lacked nothing for self-sacrificing dedication to his art, and he chose to set the finest poets of his Russian homeland: Pushkin, Fet, Lermontov and others, and then Goethe and Eichendorff in German. Unlike Rachmaninov he continued to write songs even after emigrating and settling in London.

'Medtner's musical vocabulary is very rich and expressive,' Levental and Peters explain in their own booklet note, which is printed together with English translations of the lyrics. 'Some songs immediately captivate you, others require a certain effort from the listener. Anyone who takes up the challenge, makes a discovery. Every song is a treasure and an intimate, spiritual confession from the composer to his listener.'

In the category of 'immediate appeal' surely fall the two songs of Op.13: the ardent vocal response to Pushkin's Winter Evening perfectly underscored by the stormy piano part. No less unmistakably Russian in expression is the complementary Epitaph, triumphant even in its mournfulness and like many other of the songs here not as stern as much of Medtner's piano music. Any listener looking for the composer's personal voice, behind the virtuoso keyboard fireworks, should start here.

Tracks:

0 - 03. 3 Romances, Op. 3:
I. At the Gates of the Holy Cloister
II. I've Lived to See Desire Vanish
III. On the Lake

04 - 05. 2 Poems, Op. 13
I. Winter Evening
II. Epitaph

06 - 13. 8 Poems, Op. 24
I. Day and Night
II. Willow, Why do You Lower
III. The Wave and the Thought
IV. Twilight
V. I am dumbstruck
VI. Should a Smile Gently Brighten Your Face
VII. Tender Whisper, Timid Breathing
VIII. I Have Come to You, Delighted

14 -20. 7 Poems, Op. 28
I. Unexpected Rain I
I. I Can't Listen to This Birdsong
III. Butterfly
IV. Heavy, Dark and Faded
V. Peace in Springtime
VI. I Sit Deep in Thought and Alone
VII. Lord, Send Your Comfort

21 - 27. 7 Poems after Pushkin, Op. 29
I. Muse
II. The Singer
III. Night Piece
IV. The Horse
V. Elegy
VI. The Rose 27
VII. Incantation