01. Schubert Piano Sonata No.20 In A Major, D.959-1. Allegro
02. Schubert Piano Sonata No.20 In A Major, D.959-2. Andantino
03. Schubert Piano Sonata No.20 In A Major, D.959-3. Scherzo (Allegro vivace)
04. Schubert Piano Sonata No.20 In A Major, D.959-4. Rondo (Allegretto)
05. Schubert Piano Sonata No.21 In B Flat Major, D.960-1. Molto moderato
06. Schubert Piano Sonata No.21 In B Flat Major, D.960-2. Andante sostenuto
07. Schubert Piano Sonata No.21 In B Flat Major, D.960-3. Scherzo (Allegro vivace con delicatezza)
08. Schubert Piano Sonata No.21 In B Flat Major, D.960-4. Allegro ma non troppo

With his 60th birthday approaching, the Polish pianist Krystian Zimerman thought it was time “to find the courage for works such as these and the last Beethoven sonatas. I’ve played these pieces for 30 years, but always feared them tremendously because of my unbelievable respect for the composers. Perhaps I worried that if I left them any longer, it would be too late.” Zimerman has used a normal piano, but fitted with a keyboard made by himself, designed to create qualities Schubert would have known in his instruments. Compared to a modern grand piano, the hammer strikes a different point of the string, enhancing its ability to sustain a singing sound – though it does also set up different overtones and the piano might sound strangely tuned. Also, the action is lighter. On a modern grand piano the many repeated notes in Schubert could turn into Prokofiev. According to Zimmerman, these two last Sonatas contribute significantly to our view of Schubert’s greatness, as “he switches into a different gear, daring radically to use new ideas in harmony and polyphony. Compared to his earlier sonatas, they could almost be by another composer.” The album was recorded in January 2016.

声明:本站所有hires无损音乐均转载于互联网,并不代表本站立场!如若本站内容侵犯了原著者的合法权益,可联系我们进行处理! 拒绝任何人以任何形式在本站发表与中华人民共和国法律相抵触的言论!