Cider - Shop now
Buy used: $25.96
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime
FREE delivery Friday, May 9 to Nashville 37217 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Or Prime members get FREE delivery Wednesday, May 7. Order within 1 hr 31 mins.
Condition: Used: Good
Comment: Very Good Condition! Disc is in very good condition with original art and case. Ships directly from Amazon!

Grazyna Bacewicz: Piano Sonata No. 2; Quintets Nos. 1 & 2

Imported ed.

4.6 out of 5 stars 18 ratings

$25.96
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime
FREE Returns
See all 2 formats and editions Hide other formats and editions
Listen Now with Amazon Music
Bacewicz: Piano Sonata No.2; Piano Quintets Nos.1&2 Amazon Music Unlimited
Price
New from Used from
Audio CD, April 5, 2011
$25.96
$13.09 $9.91

Track Listings

1 Moderato molto espressivo - Allegro
2 Presto
3 Grave
4 Con passione
5 Maestoso - Agitato
6 Largo
7 Toccata. Vivo
8 Moderato - Allegro
9 Larghetto
10 Allegro giocoso

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

Pianist Krystian Zimerman returned to the recording studio after a five-year absence to celebrate the 100th birthday of the foremost female Polish composer of the 20th century, Grażyna Bacewicz. This album features two hugely imaginative piano quintets and the forceful Second Piano Sonata that Krystian Zimerman performed at the Salzburg Festival in 2008 to rhapsodic reviews. Die Presse wrote: "One is . . . unlikely to experience anywhere else Polish music of such power and charm and, at the same time, such refinement . . . In the "Maestoso" first movement, Zimerman demonstrated his incredible flexibility, impetuous passages merging directly into supple tenderness without any loss of tension." This album is only Zimerman's third chamber music recording for Deutsche Grammophon - rare music played with rare genius to revelatory effect.

From the Artist

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s Grażyna Bacewicz was famous as one of the leading and most forward-looking composers of her generation. Comparisons were drawn with Nadia Boulanger, who had occupied an equally prominent position in the world of music before the Second World War. Today it is Sofia Gubai¬dulina who plays this role on the contemporary classical scene. If Grażyna Bacewicz's music failed to reach a wider international audience, this was due above all to the circumstances in which she lived and worked: during the most creative and productive years of her life as a composer, her native Poland - like all the other countries of the Eastern Bloc - was cut off from developments in the world at large and, more especially, in the world of western culture. Grażyna Bacewicz was born in Łódź on 5 February 1909 and died in Warsaw on 17 January 1969. She was active as a composer, violinist and teacher. She attended the Warsaw Conservatory, where she studied composition with Kazimierz Sikorski and the violin with Józef Jarzębski, graduating in 1932 and at the same time studying the piano with Józef Turczyński, before furthering her composition studies with Nadia Boulanger in Paris and perfecting her violin technique with André Touret and, later, Carl Flesch at the École normale de Musique in Paris. Her studies in Paris were supported by Ignacy Jan Paderewski. Bacewicz's works are exceptionally rich and varied, extending, as they do, to all the different musical genres and forms. But although she wrote symphonic works and instrumental concertos, her great passion was chamber music. Among her contributions to the medium are seven string quartets entirely capable of standing comparison with those of Bartók. Bacewicz was in total command of her métier. Her pieces are invariably notable for their clear and careful formal planning. She worked constantly at refining her musical language. During the interwar years her aesthetic outlook owed much to that of Karol Szymanow¬ski, while also reflecting the influence of French music. In the wake of the Second World War her style became more animated and dynamic, a development arguably due to the influence of Stravinsky, Bartók and Prokof¬iev and to her use of stylized forms of Polish folk music. At the end of the 1950s she made a cautious attempt to adopt a new aesthetic approach that she herself termed "avant-garde". Bacewicz's music has all the qualities of an exceptional art. Her formal mastery and technical brilliance have lost none of their ability to dazzle us today. This is a conviction shared by Krystian Zimerman: "I'd like to honour a composer to whom I and all the rest of us owe a great deal. I thought about recording the two quintets as long ago as 2002, when I presented Deutsche Grammophon with my recording plans for the next few years. I was still a student when I first got to know Grażyna Bacewicz's works in the 1970s. At that time my repertory included the Second Piano Sonata. This is a work I continue to perform at my recitals, and I should add that wherever I play it, it always goes down very well with audiences. After my recitals I am regularly asked: `Who wrote this music? Where can I get hold of a copy of the score? Are there any recordings?'" On 5 February 2009 - the centenary of Bacewicz's birth - Krystian Zimerman gave the first of five concerts devoted exclusively to her music. It took place in her birthplace, Łódź, which was also the birthplace of Artur Rubinstein. The programme for this first concert featured the two Piano Quintets and the Second Piano Sonata. The five concerts were given in Poland's five most important cities: not only Łódź but also Warsaw, Poznań, Cracow and Katowice. In every case the musicians were enthusiastically received. Bacewicz and her formally perfect music returned in triumph to the concert hall. Krystian Zimerman and his four distinguished colleagues brought all their skill and innovative understanding to these works, making them sound freshly minted for the 21st century. "Our work in the rehearsal room will always remain lodged in my memory as something unique and unforgettable," says the cellist Rafał Kwiatkowski. "To be able to work together on a common goal was not just fantastic but mutually inspiring. I think we were very successful in what we achieved in the field of sonority, tone colour and, more generally, the colourful light that we were able to throw on the music. I have the feeling that we created a very special kind of aesthetic ap¬¬proach. But how could it be otherwise when Krystian Zimerman was at the piano?" The violinist Kaja Danczowska had already worked with Krystian Zimerman in the recording studio, notably on pieces by Szymanowski. Asked how she thought the deepest layers and ideas of this music could be reached, she replied: "One need only surrender to the composer because everything she wanted to say is writ¬ten into the music." The second violinist, Agata Szym¬czewska, who is also the youngest member of the group, admits that she had previously had little experience of playing chamber music, but after working with artists like Krystian Zimerman and Kaja Danczowska she is firmly convinced that in future the world of chamber music will mean far more to her than it has done until now: "I'm very happy I was able to work with musicians like these and to rehearse these exceptionally interesting pieces with them." "For me," says the viola player Ryszard Groblew¬ski, "the music of Grażyna Bacewicz was already a known quantity, and I was aware of its exceptional quality. That's why it's been a great honour for me to work with Krystian Zimerman and three other brilliant musicians in celebrating this magnificent Polish composer on the occasion of her hundredth anniversary. The two quintets, which I've now got to know in greater detail, are veritable pearls. I hope our recording will help to bring Grażyna Bacewicz's name to the attention of a wider audience." The First Piano Quintet was premiered in 1952 and quickly hailed as a work of exceptional maturity in terms of its musical ideas and the ways in which those ideas are implemented. All four sections are logically interconnected so as to create a four-movement cycle, while also revealing highly personal emotions on the part of the composer. The magisterial musical language reflects the work's classical form. As always with Bacewicz, the composer's technical skills and her understanding of the instruments' range of sonorities are on the very highest level. It is clear that great passion informs this work, a point evident from even the very first bars, in which a lyrical section (Moderato molto espressivo) is contrasted with the iridescent brilliance of the virtuosity and also with the figurative fragments (Allegro). The second section is a scherzo at a markedly faster tempo. It is written as a stylized Polish folk dance, the oberek, a dance of which the composer was particularly fond and which is heard again in the final movement of the Second Piano Sonata. The Second Piano Sonata was written a year later and belongs to the same creative period as the First Piano Quintet. Both works share a similar neoclassical form, a comparable post-Romantic range of expression and the use of the oberek. We would be entirely justified in speaking of this work in the same breath as the great piano sonatas of the 20th century, including, for example, the late sonatas of Prokofiev. The three-movement work begins with a Maestoso - Agitato filled with contrasts and emo-tional tensions and built up along the lines of an opening allegro. The highly emotional Largo is reminiscent of the slow movement of the First Piano Quintet, while the final Toccata sweeps the listener along with its virtuosity and energy, the latter produced by its use of the obe¬rek. It was Bacewicz herself who gave the first performance of the Second Piano Sonata, a work that calls on its performer's entire technical arsenal. A few years later the piece was taken into the repertory of Andrzej Jasiński, who subsequently taught Krystian Zimerman and inspired his famous pupil with an abiding love of this extraordinary work. The two piano quintets were written thirteen years apart. The second of them dates from 1965 and is generally regarded as one of the most important of all her contributions to the medium. It also represents a change of aesthetic direction for its composer: as she admitted at the time, she was now moving towards the avant-garde and the world of dodecaphony, aleatory features and complex tone colours. Formally speak¬ing, the work harks back to Classical models. But it achieves its sense of cohesion by dint of its uninhibited flood of sounds, most frequently in the form of individual motifs and brief phrases which, one after the other, are carried forward by the different instruments. "A lot happens in my music," Grażyna Bacewicz once explained. "It's aggressive and at the same time lyrical." This says all that needs to be said about her music. There is indeed much that happens in it, and even though several decades have now passed since it was written, it continues to exert a powerful fascination on listeners and performers alike. Jan Popis

Product details

  • Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ No
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Product Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.63 x 5.31 x 0.39 inches; 3.6 ounces
  • Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Deutsche Grammophon
  • Item model number ‏ : ‎ 16239271
  • Original Release Date ‏ : ‎ 2011
  • SPARS Code ‏ : ‎ DDD
  • Date First Available ‏ : ‎ January 14, 2011
  • Label ‏ : ‎ Deutsche Grammophon
  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B002L5IKHW
  • Number of discs ‏ : ‎ 1
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 18 ratings

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
18 global ratings

Review this product

Share your thoughts with other customers

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2019
    Fabulous, fascinating music. Highly recommended by a music snob.
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2018
    Brilliant playing by Krystian Zimerman in the piano sonata and both piano quintets. As with Bacewicz's string quartets, the earlier work(Piano Quintet#1)is the more immediately accessible.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2018
    From the Forbes.com CD of the Week Review: ". . . an obvious, superb introductory Bacewicz disc and a must-have for anyone who is already beholden to Bacewicz' music . . . [this recording is] easily at the top of the heap . . . seductive, phenomenal pianism . . ."

    "“A lot happens in my music,” Grażyna Bacewicz is quoted in the fine liner notes; “it’s aggressive and at the same time lyrical.” That’s exactly right and every listener will get that impression from the first hearing. But the music is also complex, extremely well written – which is something that gives the music its staying power and its ability to delight yet even more, after each repeat-listening. The key is now to get Bacewicz performed often enough to be able to enjoy not just first, but repeat-listenings. Until then, this CD serves us very well."
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2011
    I have got this CD since last Friday, and already listened to it several times. And of course at first I need to make some 'adjustment' for my hearings to 20th century sound of this music. Grazyna Bacewicz is a great 20th century female Polish composer, and surely her name will be lifted up very high on concert platform through this recording. After my first listening, I asked my polish friend about where to get her scores..And surely also someday her name could be at the same degree with her compatriots like Szymanowski and Lutoslawski. Krystian Zimerman at his fifties for me now could be annointed as 'The King Midas' of the piano..Once he touches any music, it becomes gold to the fullest : Tonal quality, tempo flexibility, excellency, blendness (for 2 Piano quintetts with the exceptional 4 Polish string quartett), and fresh new sound of music. But most of all, Zimerman always shows excellency in any music he plays. Never he shows something just 'mere' sound. If Zimerman maybe is too highly associated for Chopin, Brahms, and Beethoven, this recording proves more. He could be 'at home' in any kinds of music he wants to play, even to conduct. (remember the utmost CD of Chopin 2 Piano concertos featuring Polish Festival Orchestra from DG)
    Highly Recommended CD..
    26 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on June 14, 2012
    I'm having a lot of trouble removing this recording from my CD player. I did not know a note of this Polish composer's music before plunging in with this compilation, largely on the strength of Krystian Zimerman's advocacy - I haven't heard a bad recording from him and I am a big fan of his disciplined, virtuosic yet sensitive keyboard technique. All the compositions have wonderful structure and logic, with novel textures and unexpected colours. Both the first piano quintet and the piano sonata are easily listenable - not your grandfather's Mozart by any means, but engaging harmonies and great rhythmic drive. The second piano quintet delves more into tone clusters and 'events' in the sound and uses recognizable harmonic structures to a much lesser extent, but I still did not find it a 'difficult' listen. As a student of the piano myself, Zimerman's full-blooded, rocket-like glissandi in a call-and-answer exchange with the strings in the final movement made me grin and put chills down my spine at the same time. All the string playing is wonderfully coloured, deeply felt, and faultless. My guess is that devotees of the music of Shostakovich, Samuel Barber, Prokofiev, and/or Ligeti's piano etudes and violin concerto will find much to like here.
    11 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2012
    Grazyna Bacewicz: Piano Sonata No. 2; Quintets Nos. 1 & 2 is a 2011 Deutsche Gramophon recording pianist Krystian Zimmerman. Jan Popis has written the music notes. A very interesting and intriguing recording. I thoroughly enjoyed this recording. Highly recommended and well done Mr. Zimmerman! 5/5.
    4 people found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
  • M. Girardin
    5.0 out of 5 stars Merci !
    Reviewed in France on October 6, 2013
    Rendons grâces à Krystian Zimerman pour nous avoir fait découvrir Grazyna Bacewicz. Cette compositrice polonaise avait été, semble-t-il, la figure de proue de la musique moderne polonaise pendant et au sortir de la seconde guerre mondiale. Hélas, l'isolement de son pays l'a empêchée d'acquérir une notoriété internationale et, depuis sa mort en 1969, elle a peu à peu sombré dans l'oubli.
    Sa musique est pourtant de premier ordre : personnelle, bénéficiant d'un langage et d'une forme parfaitement maîtrisés et maintenant constamment l'attention de l'auditeur en éveil. "Il se passe beaucoup de choses dans ma musique" disait-elle à raison. C'est une immense gifle bienfaitrice que nous assène alors cette musique au lyrisme oppressant, qu'il s'agisse des 2 quintettes avec piano, chefs d'oeuvre du genre s'inscrivant sans conteste au niveau de ceux de Brahms et Schumann, ou de la seconde sonate pour piano, plus intimiste mais éminemment bouleversante dans son adagio.

    Pour cette réhabilitation en grandes pompes, à l'occasion du centenaire de sa naissance, Krystian Zimerman s'est entouré de 4 des meilleurs musiciens polonais. Bien que ne constituant pas un ensemble permanent, les 5 musiciens ici réunis jouent d'une seule voix, réunis pas leur passion pour cette musique qui parle leur langue natale. Du post-romantisme du premier quintette à la musique "avant-gardiste" d'influence dodécaphoniste du second, c'est à un voyage au plus profond de nous même que nous invitent Grazyna Bacewicz et ses 5 sublimes interprètes.
    Qu'ils en soient tous, une fois encore, remerciés.
    Report
  • jan ovland
    5.0 out of 5 stars all is good, thanks
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 8, 2018
    Arrived on time,all is good,thanks !
  • Strossmayer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
    Reviewed in Spain on April 20, 2019
    Buen sonido y estupendas interpretaciones de estas obras de Bacewicz
    Por su puesto que Zimerman ya es una garantía , si tegusta este pianista no te puede faltar
  • Denis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un des plus beaux disques de Zimerman
    Reviewed in France on October 5, 2017
    Un disque de combat et de justice de Zimerman pour rendre hommage à une magnifique compositrice polonaise (disparue en 1969) et scandaleusement sous estimée. Grazyna Bacevicz est une très grande compositrice, l'égale d'un Lutoslawski ou d'un Penderecki, fabuleuse chambriste, ses quintettes sont une merveille, tout comme ses quatuors à corde. Son deuxième quintette écrit en dodécaphonie vous coupe le souffle, tant Bacevicz rend cela évident. Epoustouflant.
    Zimerman et ses amis Polonais sont des chambristes remarquable. A leur écoute tout semble aller de soi. Ce disque fait partie de ceux de l'île déserte. Merci maître Zimerman.