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Mozart - Piano Sonatas Vol.1 | Somm SOMMCD0191

Mozart - Piano Sonatas Vol.1

£12.69 £10.79

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Label: Somm

Cat No: SOMMCD0191

Barcode: 0748871019126

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Instrumental

Release Date: 2nd January 2019

Contents

About

SOMM Recordings announces the launch of a major new series surveying Mozart’s complete Piano Sonatas featuring the acclaimed “lion of the keyboard” Peter Donohoe in his highly-anticipated first-ever recordings of the composer’s solo piano works.

The landmark six-volume series launches with two early Sonatas – Nos.2 (K280) and 6 (K284) – and a later masterpiece – No.17 (K570), the first composed when Mozart was 18 in 1774, the last, described by Alfred Einstein as “the ideal” of the composer’s sonatas, in 1789 at the age of 33.

Mozart’s 19 Piano Sonatas, as music critic Christopher Morley comments in his booklet notes, “cover so much of his short life… and a huge range of styles and genres, from quasi-concertos without orchestra to simple study pieces… There are generic dance-movements, there are movements of exquisite contemplation, there are explorations of searching counterpoint, there are the most exquisite melodies, and there is the perfume of opera”.

The sonatas in this first volume include the early harpsichord-accented Second in F major (K280), the dignified ceremonial of the Dürnitz Sonata, No.6 in D major (K284) and the Sonata No.17 in B flat major (K570), a work whose surface brilliance disguises its inner complexity. The impressive and sombre Fantasia No.3 in D minor (K397) completes the disc.

Described by BBC Radio 3 as “one of our greatest home-grown performers”, Peter Donohoe’s previous recordings for SOMM have attracted substantial critical approval and include the complete sonatas of Scriabin and Prokofiev along with works by Stravinsky.

His recent partnering with Valerie Tryon and Mishka Rushdie Momen in Mozart’s solo, duo and trio concertos (SOMMCD2682) prompted Gramophone to remark “it’s good to be reminded just how much fun Mozart’s works involving multiple pianos are”.

Reviews

Without the slightest hint of the coiffured or manicured, [Peter Donohoe] appears to take early Beethoven as his interpretative trajectory with a glove-off spontaneity that imbues these magical scores with a compelling vitality and freshness. ... It was high time someone blew the interpretative cobwebs off this still under-appreciated repertoire, and Donohoe is clearly the person to do it.  Julian Haylock (Recording of the Month)
BBC Music Magazine April 2019

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