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Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall
 
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Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall [Import]

Ludwig van Beethoven , Frederic Chopin , Charles-Valentin Alkan , Ferruccio Busoni , Nikolay Medtner , Marc-André Hamelin Audio CD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Frequently Bought Together

Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall + Godowsky: The Complete Studies on Chopin's Etudes + Hamelin: (12) Etudes / Little Nocturne / Con intissimo sentimento - excerpts / Theme and Variations (Cathy's Variations)
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Product Details

  • Performer: Marc-André Hamelin
  • Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven, Frederic Chopin, Charles-Valentin Alkan, Ferruccio Busoni, Nikolay Medtner
  • Audio CD (January 24, 1995)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Label: Hyperion UK
  • ASIN: B000002ZVE
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #164,749 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. First movement from Piano Concerto No.3
2. Romanza for Piano Concerto No.1- Romanza; Larghetto
3. Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76: Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76 for the hands separately and reunited- Fantasie in A flat major (left hand)
4. Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76: Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76 - Introduction, Variation and finale in D major (right hand)
5. Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76: Trois Grandes Etudes, Op.76 - Moument semblable et perpetuel [Rondo-Toccata in C minor] (hands reunited)
6. Sonatina No. 6: Sonatina No. 6; Kammer-Fantasie uber Carmen, BV284 , after Bizet
7. Danza festiva , Op. 38, No.3: Danza festiva , Op. 38, No.3( Forgotten Melodies, Vol.1)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

The Canadian pianist Marc-André Hamelin is quickly becoming a favorite with piano connoisseurs, particularly in late Romantic music. In this live recital, Hamelin concentrates mainly on unusual arrangements: a Beethoven movement as recomposed by Alkan, a Balakirev reduction of a Chopin concertos movement for solo piano, Busoni's Sonatina which uses themes from Bizet's Carmen. You have to be pretty far involved in the late Romantic ethos to appreciate these obscure tidbits, but if you are, Hamelin's virtuosic and colorful performances will prove extremely attractive. The live performance atmosphere comes across vividly in this recording, as does Hamelin's tone. --Leslie Gerber

 

Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
5 star:
 (14)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

44 of 46 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars High Drama, November 14, 2001
This review is from: Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall (Audio CD)
This recital should stand as one of the great documents of live performance in the last twenty years. Had Hamelin essayed more popular repertoire - instead of headlining with "Alkan, who?" - he might have received wider notice. To the 19th Century truffle hunters who are his fans, his reputation is ever-burnished.

"Live at Wigmore Hall" is culled from three recitals presented in June 1994. The programs, designed by producer Ates Orga, bore fanciful titles: The Concert Room, Grand Opera and Song, and The Salon.

The music, much of it transcription, is by composer-performers who pushed the boundaries of their art. Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888), the reclusive French virtuoso and a Hamelin staple, figures largely. His massive conceptions challenge the listener's appreciation of music itself. Take for example the cadenza to Alkan's transcription of the first movement of the Beethoven Piano Concerto #3. Along with the typical recap of the main themes, Alkan maniacally conjoins Beethoven's Fifth symphony for even starker dramatic relief. It lasts six minutes, one third of the entire piece. Hamelin fills the hall with sound, his total control casting an icy glitter. Who is Alkan's audience? In the composer's day, few performers would even attempt these works in public. The rewards of playing them seemed apparent only to a few discerning artists, Franz Liszt among them. Busoni and Petri kept Alkan alive in the early part of our century; Raymond Lewenthal was the first to make extensive recordings in the Sixties; recent champions include pianist-scholar Ronald Smith and Hamelin.

After dispatching that monster, Hamelin relaxes with the fragrant Balakirev reduction of the "Romanza" from Chopin's Piano Concerto #1. It's the least removed from the original of the transcriptions played here. The main course is next: Alkan's "Tres Grandes Etudes" for the hands separately and united. The gauche etude precedes by sixty years the popularity of left hand works, and it's likely nothing written since has been as formidable. At one point, Hamelin negotiates what has to be two pages of leaps in bristling chords. When I first heard it I thought I detected some hesitation on his part; I now chalk it up to rubato! As the heroic chords draw to a close silence. Perhaps Hamelin takes a drink of water here. Then the right hand has its say in a fifteen minute novella of arpeggio studies and five-fingered counterpoint. The music becomes a test of will. As Hamelin lifts his hands from the keys, concluding yet another ringing coda, we can imagine him waving off first aid. He pounces again; beginning from a hush, the soft pedal fully engaged, the hands-united etude emerges, whirring like a dynamo. For some five minutes, the notes whip by at a speed that threatens to invoke relativity. The musical quotient dips a bit here, but in the blistering parallel scales, Alkan does his countryman Charles Hanon proud. Then, abruptly, it's over. The audience sighs with relief, and seeing that Hamelin is free of demonic possession, erupts in applause.

Dessert is sweet. Hamelin shows a beguiling tone in the Busoni "Carmen" Sonatina which treats some of Bizet's familiar themes with mordant éclat. Medtner's "Danza Festiva" closes the program with a whirl.

I hope this pseudo-correspondence gives a sense of the occasion and magnetism generated by these performances. Not all the music is inspired, but Hyperion is to be congratulated for staging this high-wire act. Bravo, Mr. Hamelin!

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26 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fusion of genius, May 9, 2001
By 
J. Deon (Nelson, BC Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall (Audio CD)
If you buy only one Hamelin recording, if you buy only one Alkan recording, if you buy only one piano recording, if you buy only one recording PERIOD...Get this one. This is the one recording I'd take to a desert island with me. This is the one recording I'd put in a time capsule to sum up all that is great about my generation. This is the one recording I'd put aboard a spacecraft lest it encounter alien beings intent on studying the music of humanity.

I've been listening to this disc weekly for the past two years and it never fails to amaze me. Every piece on this CD is an absolute gem and every performance a towering masterpiece of interpretation. Let's start with the opening Alkan transcription: Never have I witnessed a more supremely satisfying fusion of genius: The genius of Beethoven as composer, the genius of Alkan as transcriber, and the genius of Marc-Andre Hamelin as interpreter. Every time I listen I find more to praise. Any single track on this CD would be worth the price of the disc but with the mammoth Alkan transcription, the beautiful and well-placed Balakirev transcription, the epic 'Troise Grande Etudes', the highly original Busoni sonatine, and the brilliant encore - Medtner's 'Danza Festiva', this recording is an embarrassment of riches, an absolute feast.

If I'd ever dare to call a performance "perfect", I'd venture with this recital. If there are any flaws here, they're buried under the technical and musical greatness which overrides and

overwhelms.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly phenomenal, October 3, 2003
This review is from: Marc-André Hamelin Live at Wigmore Hall (Audio CD)
From track 1 on, it is clear that Hamelin is one of piano music's most meteoric talents ever to blaze the pianistic firmament. He dispatches Beethoven as if driven by the very fires of Hell. Surprising, as elements of wry humour are often a characteristic of this artist. But with that aside, this is a brilliantly successful recital.

Hamelin has no equal as an interpreter of Alkan; he inhabits the overheated world of this strange proto-Lisztian figure with a completeness that combines a total mastery of its fearsome technical challenges with an innate understanding of its sometime elusive emotional content.

A huge achievement...and not only technically but musically as well. Hamelin delivers on every level: this recording had me gasping in disbelief, and then laughing out loud at the sheer audacity of it all. Hamelin is a revelation. Where was I before I discovered Him? I might as well have been unconscious.

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