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Jean-Efflam Bavouzet & François-Frédéric Guy - Debussy, Stravinsky & Bartók: Transcriptions for 2 Pianists (2015) [Hi-Res]

Jean-Efflam Bavouzet & François-Frédéric Guy - Debussy, Stravinsky & Bartók: Transcriptions for 2 Pianists (2015) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Debussy, Stravinsky & Bartók: Transcriptions for 2 Pianists
  • Year Of Release: 2015
  • Label: Chandos
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: flac 24bits - 96.0kHz +booklet
  • Total Time: 01:04:05
  • Total Size: 960 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist
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01. 2 Kép, Op. 10, Sz. 46, BB 59 (2 Pictures) [Arr. Z. Kocsis for 2 Pianos]: No. 1, Viragzas [In Full Flower]
02. 2 Kép, Op. 10, Sz. 46, BB 59 (2 Pictures) [Arr. Z. Kocsis for 2 Pianos]: No. 2, A falu tanca [Village Dance]
03. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Prélude -
04. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Du fond, à gauche, apparaissent deux jeunes filles craintives et curieuses -
05. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Une des deux jeunes filles danse seule -
06. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): On aperçoit le jeune homme au fond, à gauche, qui semble se cacher
07. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Ils dansent ensemble -
08. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Le jeune homme a suivi cette dernière danse par curiosité d'abord -
09. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Dans l'emportement de leur danse -
10. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Pourtant, le jeune homme intervient en écartant leurs têtes doucement -
11. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Ils dansent désormais tous les trois -
12. Jeux, L. 126 (Arr. J.-E. Bavouzet for 2 Pianos): Une balle de tennis tombe à leurs pieds
13. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Introduction -
14. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): The Augurs of Spring-Dances of the Young Girls -
15. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Ritual of Abduction -
16. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Spring Rounds -
17. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Ritual of the River Tribes -
18. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Procession of the Sage -
19. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): The Sage -
20. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 1 "Adoration of the Earth" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Dance of the Earth
21. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Introduction -
22. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Mystic Circles of the Young Girls -
23. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Glorification of the Chosen One -
24. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Evocation of the Ancestors -
25. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Ritual Action of the Ancestors -
26. Le sacre du printemps, Pt. 2 "The Sacrifice" (Version for Piano 4 Hands): Sacrificial Dance

These two-piano transcriptions played by Jean-Efflam Bavouzet and François-Frédéric Guy renew our experience of three great orchestral works, each of which was premiered in 1913.

Bavouzet’s version of Jeux is, like any fine transcription, far more than a memento of the original. Not only the trills and tremolandos needed on the piano to maintain sustained notes and chords, but also the interplay between the pianists, lines and motifs bouncing between them, become active participants in an intimate music of undulant ambiguity, dream, and darkness.

‘In Full Flower’, the first of the Two Pictures by Bartók, is often taken as his most Debussian composition thanks to his exploration of new scales and harmonic worlds. However, in bringing out its luxuriant and blossoming Hungarian aspects, Zoltán Kocsis emphasises rather its fully Bartókian character, which Bavouzet has conveyed to wide critical praise. The two ‘pictures’ here provide a route from Debussy’s world of erotic reverie to Stravinsky’s of ancient ritual. The thundering and the bells of the two pianos in full and accurate fury make this version of Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du printemps hardly less forceful in the hands of these two dazzling and virtuosic pianists.

"Fabulous playing from a pair of completely on-form pianists, which lends The Rite of Spring’s rhythmic themes a quite thrilling intensity." (Gramophone Magazine)

"The programme works brilliantly, allowing us to hear the music as the composers did when they worked on these masterpieces and, in the case of the Rite, in the form in which it was most often played in the years after the premiere. Any losses in orchestral palette are compensated for by the clarity and wide range of colours at the pianists’ disposal." (Sunday Times)

"Bavouzet and his well-matched partner, François-Fréderic Guy, play with nimble grace, capturing the works wit and mystery. This gripping album is dedicated to Pierre Boulez, guru and enabler, for his 90th birthday." (The Observer)



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  • olga1001
  •  wrote in 15:57
    • Like
    • 1
Stravinsky is played on 2 pianos in spite of 4 hands version :(
It's odd that high part (primo of 4 hands) sounds just in our right and low part (secondo) sounds just in our left.

4 hands version was made almost as a sketch for orchestra at the same time with orchestra version and completed in 1913 (1 piano of 2 hands version seems to have existed for ballet rehearsal).
Michael Tilson Thomas and Ralph Grierson played on 2 pianos expanding 4 hands in 1967 without knowledge of Stravinsky who rushed into making 2 pianos version in 1968.

By the way when Stravinsky and Debussy tried to play 4 hands version, they broke off their friendship !?
Thanks