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Born 19 months and 357 miles apart, Frédéric Chopin and Franz
Liszt became the two pianistic giants of the 19th century and together changed
the future of piano playing. This recording features the superb Fischer Duo in
performances of all three of Chopin’s works for cello and piano, as well as
the four cello and piano duos by Liszt, composed during the last twelve years of
his life. The recital opens with Chopin’s final composition- the magnificent G
minor Sonata, written in 1846. This was the last work Chopin played in public
and the last work he would hear at his deathbed. Liszt wrote two versions of La
Lugubre gondola for solo piano, one before his son-in-law Wagner’s death and
one after. It is the second version that Liszt transcribed for cello and piano,
and it was his preferred version of the piece. Die Zelle in Nonnenwerth is Liszt’s
1880 reconstruction of his beautiful song of the same name, named for the small
island in the Rhine where Liszt spent the summers of 1841-43. After early
attempts at solo piano polonaises while still in Poland, Chopin wrote the
delightful Polonaise Brillante calling it “nothing more than a glittering
trifle for the salon, for ladies.” Romance oubliée was originally a song and
is Liszt’s 1880 transcription for cello and piano. The two Élégies were
written in 1874 and 1877 respectively. These short works are both in three
sections and are prime examples of Liszt’s more introverted side. The
virtuosic Grand Duo Concertant was composed by Chopin in the popular ‘opera
fantasy’ genre after themes from Meyerbeer’s Robert le Diable. Founded in
1971, the Fischer duo has delighted listeners with performances described as “intense
and persuasive” (Gramophone) “boldly imaginative” (Boston Globe), and “beautiful
and intense” (The New York Times).
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