$40.00
Out of Stock
[ Musique en Wallonie / CD ]
Release Date: Friday 5 September 2025
This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.
Though Belgium in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was known above all for its "school" of violin-playing, represented by figures such as Henry Vieuxtemps and Eugène Ysaÿe, it was also home to a flourishing piano "school". After independence in 1830, the new nation's conservatoires opened numerous classes, method-books and anthologies proliferated, and piano-makers kept pace with new patents and instruments. This dynamic environment naturally had an effect on composers; everyone who wrote music wrote for this king of instruments, and promoted the results either by performing them themselves or by confiding them to virtuosos to execute in concerts or competitions. The most famous of these, the Eugène Ysaÿe Competition (since 1951 the Queen Elisabeth International Competition), opened to pianists in 1938, with Emil Gilels emerging victorious. A quarter of a century later, Jean-Claude Vanden Eynden entered this prestigious contest and, at sixteen years of age, came away with a third prize. Trained at the Brussels Conservatoire by Eduardo del Pueyo, he would go on to an international career still active six decades later. The programme of this CD is an homage to this long lineage of teachers and students. It testifies to the practices as well as the networks of friendship that gave this "school", throughout its various ramifications, a particular character.
Joseph Jongen:
2 Pièces, Op. 33: No. 2, Soleil à midi
César Franck:
Danse lente, CFF 25
Arthur De Greef:
Valse-Caprice
Michel Lysight:
7 Koan for Piano : Koan I
7 Koan for Piano: Koan II
7 Koan for Piano: Koan III
7 Koan for Piano: Koan IV
7 Koan for Piano: Koan V
7 Koan for Piano: Koan VI
7 Koan for Piano: Koan VII
Guillaume Lekeu:
Pièces égoïstes: Andante "Pour moi seul", V. 87
Léon Jongen:
Campeador for Piano
Théo Ysaÿe:
Nocturne for Piano No. 2, Op. 8
Frederik van Rossum:
Black & White, Op. 40: I. Prélude
Black & White, Op. 40: II. Intermezzo
Black & White, Op. 40: III. Postlude