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Jack Liebeck & Katya Apekisheva - Fritz Kreisler: Music for Violin and Piano (2023) [Hi-Res]

Jack Liebeck & Katya Apekisheva - Fritz Kreisler: Music for Violin and Piano (2023) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Fritz Kreisler: Music for Violin and Piano
  • Year Of Release: 2014 / 2023
  • Label: Hyperion
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet) [96kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 1:08:48
  • Total Size: 1.22 GB / 300 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Kreisler: Praeludium & Allegro "by Gaetano Pugnani"
02. Kreisler: Syncopation
03. Kreisler: Schön Rosmarin, Old Viennese Dance No. 3
04. Kreisler: Liebesleid, Old Viennese Dance No. 2
05. Kreisler: Liebesfreud, Old Viennese Dance No. 1
06. Kreisler: Polichinelle (Sérénade)
07. Kreisler: Tambourin chinois, Op. 3
08. Gluck: Orfeo ed Euridice, Act II: Ballo. Mélodie (Arr. Kreisler)
09. Kreisler: Toy Soldiers' March
10. Kreisler: La chasse. Caprice "by Jean-Baptiste Cartier"
11. Kreisler: Caprice viennois, Op. 2
12. Kreisler: Allegretto "by Luigi Boccherini"
13. Falla: La vida breve: Danse espagnole (Arr. Kreisler)
14. Dvořák: Slavonic Dances, Op. 72: No. 2, Mazurka in E Minor (Arr. Kreisler)
15. Kreisler: Marche miniature viennoise
16. Kreisler: Recitativo & Scherzo-Caprice, Op. 6: I. Recitativo. Lento con espressione
17. Kreisler: Recitativo & Scherzo-Caprice, Op. 6: II. Scherzo. Presto e brillante
18. Tartini: Violin Sonata in G Minor, B. g5 "Il trillo del diavolo" (Arr. Kreisler)

"Jack Liebeck is a fine player—no doubt about that—with a firm tone and rock-solid technique. The 1785 ‘Ex-Wilhelmj’ Guadagnini he plays fills St George’s, Bristol, with commanding ease … he is best in Kreisler’s transcriptions (a touching Gluck Mélodie, thrilling bravura in Falla’s Danse espagnole and a forthright, confident account of the 'Devil's Trill' Sonata, which ends the disc in style)."
- Gramophone

Hyperion is delighted to welcome award-winning violinist Jack Liebeck to the label, together with his frequent collaborator, Katya Apekisheva.

Liebeck presents a selection of music by ‘revolutionary player and the epitome of the Viennese violinist’, Fritz Kreisler. Some of Kreisler’s works have a dubious genesis. He programmed his own pieces in recitals; but in about 1905 he started passing some off as works by composers of the past, even writing a ‘Vivaldi’ concerto. He continued this practice. In 1934 he instructed his American publisher, Carl Fischer, to list his so-called ‘Classical Manuscripts’ as his own compositions in the 1935 catalogue; but this change was pre-empted when the New York Times critic, Olin Downes, was asked to give a lecture-recital with Yehudi Menuhin and started investigating the origins of the Praeludium and Allegro. Kreisler admitted it was his own work and his deception made front-page news worldwide. The Praeludium and Allegro (Classical Manuscript No 5, attributed to Gaetano Pugnani) is Kreisler’s finest achievement. When playing it at the Paris Opéra in 1923, Kreisler saw Vincent d’Indy wag a finger at him from the front row and thought he had been found out. Afterwards d’Indy told him: ‘Pugnani would not have played the Allegro in that tempo.’

This selection includes Kreisler’s absurdly virtuosic arrangement of ‘The Devil’s Trill’ by Tartini: Kreisler’s edition, incorporating a realization of the figured bass as well as fingerings and phrasings, provides a fearsome cadenza involving triple- and quadruple-stopping as well as two- and three-note trills.


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