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Shostakovich and Pupils Vol.2: Weinberg, Sviridov, Bunin | Piano Classics PCL10295

Shostakovich and Pupils Vol.2: Weinberg, Sviridov, Bunin

£14.67

New Item

Label: Piano Classics

Cat No: PCL10295

Barcode: 5063758102957

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Genre: Instrumental

Expected Release Date: 13th February 2026

Item is currently due
13th February 2026.

Order now and we will ship as soon as available.

Contents

About

While the solo piano output of Dmitri Shostakovich is smaller than one might anticipate from a composer who was himself a gifted (albeit erratic) pianist, there is more to it than the monumental sequence of 24 Preludes and Fugues which he composed shortly after the Second World War for the pianist Tatiana Nikolaeva, and in emulation of The Well-Tempered Clavier by Bach.

Indeed some of the composer’s earliest surviving music is a set of Eight Preludes, op.2, several of which were long presumed lost. Composed between 1919 and 1921, they demonstrate the teenage composer’s grasp of pianistic idioms from Chopin to Scriabin as well as the melodic facility which, it would seem, was his native gift. Towards the other end of his career, another rarity: the contributions he made in 1957 for a portmanteau set of Variations on a theme of Glinka commissioned from eight different composers.

In complement to Shostakovich’s Preludes, Fernanda Damiano presents a gentle Berceuse from the pen of the 16-year-old Mieczysław Weinberg. Conceived on a much more epic scale is the Second Piano Sonata which Weinberg wrote in 1942, the year before he first met Shostakovich and became in time one of his closest confidants. Dating from two years later, and thus still very much marked by conflict, is the Sonata by Gyorgy Sviridov: a ferocious and too-rarely known work in one movement (but several sections) breathing the same combative air as the ‘War’ Sonatas by Prokofiev. By the side of these two sonatas, the Sonatina of Revol Bunin is relatively slight, but as the work of a fluent 15-year-old, it already shows signs of the talent which caught the ear of Shostakovich before long, when he took Bunin on as his only composition pupil at the time (between 1943 and 1945).

Thus, although only Sviridov’s Sonata was composed under the influence of the older composer, Damiano’s recital presents a compelling sketch of mid-war and mid-century Soviet culture, through the prism of both the piano and of four gifted composers, each with their own distinctive voice.

‘Fernanda Damiano plays… with intelligence, conviction and… appreciation of the music’s flavour.’ – Fanfare review of Vol.1 (PCL10301)

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