Create account Log in

Paul Hindemith: Das Klavierwerk - Vol.1

[Edit]

Download links and information about Paul Hindemith: Das Klavierwerk - Vol.1 by Mauser Siegfried. This album was released in 1994 and it belongs to New Age genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 49:20 minutes.

Artist: Mauser Siegfried
Release date: 1994
Genre: New Age
Tracks: 19
Duration: 49:20
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Müdigkeiten 2:13
2. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Sehr langsam 1:18
3. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Phantastisches Duett zweier Bäume vor dem Fenster 1:49
4. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Rufe in der horchenden Nacht 4:44
5. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Ziemlich schnelle Achtel 0:41
6. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Sehr lebhaft, flimmernd 0:55
7. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Nervosität 0:52
8. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Scherzo 1:11
9. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Programmmusik: Kuckuck und Uhu (frei nach Humperdinck) 1:31
10. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - In der Art eines langsamen Menuetts 2:49
11. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Prestissimo 1:12
12. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Böser Traum. Rigoletto 0:59
13. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Foxtrot 2:24
14. In einer Nacht, Op.15 - Finale: Doppelfuge mit Engführungen 3:22
15. 1922. Suite für Klavier, Op.26 - Marsch 1:48
16. 1922. Suite für Klavier, Op.26 - Shimmy 5:24
17. 1922. Suite für Klavier, Op.26 - Nachtstück 7:19
18. 1922. Suite für Klavier, Op.26 - Boston 6:19
19. 1922. Suite für Klavier, Op.26 - Ragtime 2:30

Details

[Edit]

Paul Hindemith's final work for solo piano, 1942's Ludus Tonalis (Studies in Counterpoint, Tonal Organisation and Piano Playing), was composed two years after the German composer's wartime exile in America, and was apparently, at least in part, intended as a response to the jingoistic spirit with which Dimitri Shostakovich's Leningrad symphony had been received upon its American premiere. Though Hindemith was far from a Nazi supporter, having been branded a "cultural Bolshevik" by Hitler's government, he was stung by the way in which the war had made all German composers, regardless of their sympathies, immediately suspect. The intentionally dry subtitle of the work invokes a didactic spirit, as if Hindemith is exhibiting for the world what he, a German composer, can show the American and Russian composers who were currently overshadowing him thanks to geo-political forces far removed from the concerns of art. This 1993 recording by Siegfried Mauser, the final volume in a complete set of Hindemith's works for solo piano, finds the pianist playing in a warm, loose style that softens the sense of stiff formal consistency at the heart of this mostly theoretical work. Mauser has taken the time to tease out the melodies in these three-part fugues, imbuing them with something close to the playful spirit of Aldo Ciccolini's recordings of Erik Satie's whimsical piano works. Ludus Tonalis remains a challenging listen, but at least in this recording, not a difficult one.