Alexei Volodin's 2011 release on BR Klassik brings together three fantastic works from the piano literature: Robert Schumann's Kreisleriana, Maurice Ravel's Miroirs, and Alexander Scriabin's Sonata No. 5. Elements of brilliant fantasy and dark mystery operate in all three works, and even though Volodin's selections come from stylistically and temperamentally different composers, from widely separated times and places, the unifying core of the music is a sustained virtuosity that takes the listener into colorful realms of ...
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Alexei Volodin's 2011 release on BR Klassik brings together three fantastic works from the piano literature: Robert Schumann's Kreisleriana, Maurice Ravel's Miroirs, and Alexander Scriabin's Sonata No. 5. Elements of brilliant fantasy and dark mystery operate in all three works, and even though Volodin's selections come from stylistically and temperamentally different composers, from widely separated times and places, the unifying core of the music is a sustained virtuosity that takes the listener into colorful realms of the imagination. A creative artist, Volodin brings strong characterizations to Schumann's vignettes, which were based on the tales of E.T.A. Hoffmann, though his technical skills are more abundantly displayed in Ravel's effervescent Miroirs, which includes the special challenge of playing rapid passages at extremely soft levels. However, the most dazzling performance of the album is Scriabin's Sonata No. 5, which Volodin plays with subtlety on many levels and with a refinement that is...
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