Louis Lortie Plays Chopin, Vol. 5 Louis Lortie

Cover Louis Lortie Plays Chopin, Vol. 5

Album info

Album-Release:
2017

HRA-Release:
07.12.2018

Label: Chandos

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Louis Lortie

Composer: Frederic Francois Chopin (1810-1849)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Frédéric Chopin (1810 - 1849): Mazurkas, Op. 7:
  • 1 Mazurkas, Op. 7: No. 1 in B-Flat Major 02:30
  • 2 Mazurkas, Op. 7: No. 2 in A Minor 03:13
  • 3 Mazurkas, Op. 7: No. 3 in F Minor 02:17
  • 4 Mazurkas, Op. 7: No. 5 in C Major 00:46
  • 5 Mazurkas, Op. 7: No. 4 in A-Flat Major 01:26
  • Polonaises, Op. 26:
  • 6 Polonaises, Op. 26: No. 1 in C-Sharp Minor 08:47
  • Mazurkas, Op. 33:
  • 7 Mazurkas, Op. 33: No. 1 in G-Sharp Minor 02:00
  • 8 Mazurkas, Op. 33: No. 2 in D Major 02:31
  • 9 Mazurkas, Op. 33: No. 3 in C Major 01:47
  • 10 Mazurkas, Op. 33: No. 4 in B Minor 04:54
  • Polonaises, Op. 26:
  • 11 Polonaises, Op. 26: No. 2 in E-Flat Minor 08:20
  • Mazurkas, Op. 59:
  • 12 Mazurkas, Op. 59: No. 1 in A Minor 04:03
  • 13 Mazurkas, Op. 59: No. 2 in A-Flat Major 02:41
  • 14 Mazurkas, Op. 59: No. 3 in F-Sharp Minor 03:26
  • Polonaise in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 44:
  • 15 Polonaise in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 44 10:21
  • Allegro de concert, Op. 46:
  • 16 Allegro de concert, Op. 46 11:10
  • Total Runtime 01:10:12

Info for Louis Lortie Plays Chopin, Vol. 5



Louis Lortie’s Chopin series is achieving landmark status, as confirmed by the increasingly enthusiastic reviews of progressive volumes. This fifth one sumptuously highlights the Polish influences in Chopin’s music, offering gems from among the mazurkas and polonaises.

Relatively brief in duration and simple in structure, the mazurkas reveal other aspect of Chopin’s music: quirky melodies, strangely chromatic harmonies, oddly accented rhythms, irregular phrase lengths, and wildly contrasting keyboard textures. They represent a fascinating part of Chopin’s output, for audiences and pianists alike.

The vigour of the polonaises featured here, including the first two to be published, confirms Chopin as a radical, yet idiomatic transformer of the genre. The Allegro de concert, which Chopin was said to have kept for his projected return to ‘a free Warsaw’, is another link to his beloved country.

"... The Polonaises (Op. 26: 1&2). Op. 44) were like embarking on an adventure, each one of them telling its own absorbing story... I eagerly look forward to the next volume in this series." (Alan Becker, American Record Guide)

“... For all the virtuosity and vivacity demanded by the works, the overall feeling here is one of intimacy, the refinement and control of his [Lortie] playing allowing the music to breathe in ways one does not always hear in Chopin. Chandos recording made at Potton Hall, is beautifully engineered, intimate and delicately focused providing a small recital room ambience at the centre of which is a superb Fazioli Model F 278.” (Guy Rickards, International Piano magazine)

Louis Lortie, piano


Louis Lortie
French-Canadian pianist Louis Lortie has attracted critical acclaim throughout Europe, Asia, and the United States. He has extended his interpretative voice across a broad range of repertoire rather than choosing to specialize in one particular style. The London Times, describing his playing as "ever immaculate, ever imaginative", has identified the artist's "combination of total spontaneity and meditated ripeness that only great pianists have".

Mr. Lortie has performed complete Beethoven sonata cycles at London's Wigmore Hall, Berlin's Philharmonie, and the Sala Grande del Conservatorio Giuseppe Verdi in Milan. Die Welt described his Berlin performances as "possibly the finest Beethoven since the time of Wilhelm Kempff." As both pianist and conductor with the Montreal Symphony, he has performed all five Beethoven concertos and all of the Mozart concertos. Mr. Lortie has also won widespread acclaim for his interpretation of Ravel and Chopin. He performed the complete works of Ravel in London and Montreal for the BBC and CBC, and is renowned all over the world for his performances of the complete Chopin etudes.

Louis Lortie celebrated the bicentenary of Liszt's birth in 2011 by performing the complete Années de pèlerinage at international music capitals and festivals, and he returns to Carnegie Hall in 2014 to perform it there. His Chandos recording of this monumental work was named one of the ten best of 2012 by the New Yorker magazine.

In 2013-2014 Mr. Lortie tours in Australia, Hong Kong and Taiwan, and returns to the BBC Proms, the orchestras of St. Louis, Atlanta, Dallas, Vancouver, Detroit, the Suisse Romande, Nurnberg, BBC Philharmonic, Dresden and Hamburg, play/conducts a Mozart program for the Toronto Symphony, and performs recitals in the Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, Philadelphia, Warsaw, Montreal, Bournemouth, the Casals Festival, the Sydney Opera House, the National Arts Center, Duke University and in Milan.

Last season he performed Gershwin in Sao Paulo with Tortelier, Liszt with NHK Tokyo and Dutoit, Chopin with the Cleveland Orchestra and Van Zweden, Schubert and Liszt with Krivine in Utrecht, Mozart with the Royal Philharmonic and Dutoit; toured with the La Scala Orchestra playing Brahms 2 and with the Beethoven Orchester Bonn playing Beethoven 4 and 5. He returned to Chicago's Orchestra Hall and other important venues to perform a recital program of opera transcriptions called "Lortie goes to the Opera". Other recitals included Copenhagen, Osaka, Cremona and Dresden.

Louis Lortie has performed with the world's leading conductors, including Riccardo Chailly, Lorin Maazel, Jaap Van Zweden, Kurt Masur, Seiji Ozawa, Charles Dutoit, Kurt Sanderling, Neeme Järvi, Sir Andrew Davis, Wolfgang Sawallisch, Sir Mark Elder, Hannu Lintu, and Osmo Vänskä. He has also been involved in many chamber-music projects with such musicians as Frank Peter Zimmermann, Leonidas Kavakos, Renaud and Gautier Capuçon, Augustin Dumay, the Takács Quartet, and Gidon Kremer. His regular piano-duo partner is fellow Canadian Hélène Mercier.

He has made more than 30 recordings for the Chandos label, covering repertoire from Mozart to Stravinsky, including a set of the complete Beethoven sonatas and the complete Liszt's Années de pèlerinage. His recording of the Lutosławski Piano Concerto and Paganini Variations with Edward Gardner and the BBC Symphony was released last year, as well as his latest Chopin album, which was named one of the best recordings of 2012 by the New York Times. Future recording include a disc of Liszt's transcriptions.

Mr. Lortie's recording of Beethoven's Eroica Variations earned him an Edison Award. His disc of works by Schumann and Brahms was named one of the best CDs of the year by BBC Music Magazine, which also named his disc of Chopin etudes one of "50 Recordings by Superlative Pianists." His interpretation of Liszt's complete works for piano and orchestra with the Residentie Orchestra of The Hague was a Gramophone Editor's Choice. For the Canadian label ATMA Classique, he has recorded Mendelssohn concertos with the Orchestre symphonique de Quebec and, as conductor, Mendelssohn's "Reformation" Symphony.

Louis Lortie studied in Montreal with Yvonne Hubert (a pupil of the legendary Alfred Cortot), in Vienna with Beethoven specialist Dieter Weber, and subsequently with Schnabel disciple Leon Fleisher. He made his debut with the Montreal Symphony at the age of 13; three years later, his first appearance with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra led to an historic tour of the People's Republic of China and Japan. In 1984, he won First Prize in the Busoni Competition and was also prizewinner at the Leeds Competition. In 1992, he was named Officer of the Order of Canada, and received both the Order of Quebec and an honorary doctorate from Université Laval. He has lived in Berlin since 1997 and also has homes in Canada and Italy.

Booklet for Louis Lortie Plays Chopin, Vol. 5

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