Katalógové číslo:
ALPHA1212
Autori:
Johann Sebastian Bach, Sergej Rachmaninov
Interpreti:
Vsevolod Zavidov
Dátum vydania: 10. 4. 2026
Johann Sebastian Bach: Violin Partita No. 3 in E Major, BWV 1006
1 I. Prelude
2 II. Gavotte
3 III. Gigue
Sergei Rachmaninoff
Études-tableaux, Op. 33
4 No. 1 Allegro non troppo
5 No. 2 Allegro
6 No. 3 Grave
7 No. 4 Moderato
8 No. 5 Non Allegro - Presto
9 No. 6 Allegro con fuoco
10 No. 7 Moderato
11 No. 8 Grave
Variations on a Theme of Corelli, Op. 42
12 I. Theme Andante
13 II. Variation 1: Poco più mosso
14 III. Variation 2: L'istesso tempo
15 IV. Variation 3: Tempo di Minuetto
16 V. Variation 4: Andante
17 VI. Variation 5: Allegro (ma non tanto)
18 VII. Variation 6: L'istesso tempo
19 VIII. Variation 7: Vivace
20 IX. Variation 8: Adagio misterioso
21 X. Variation 9: Un poco più mosso
22 XI. Variation 10: Allegro scherzando
23 XII. Variation 11: Allegro vivace
24 XIII. Variation 12: L'istesso tempo
25 XIV. Variation 13: Agitato
26 XV. Intermezzo
27 XVI. Variation 14: Andante (come prima)
28 XVII. Variation 15: L'istesso tempo
29 XVIII. Variation 16: Allegro vivace
30 XIX. Variation 17: Meno mosso
31 XX. Variation 18: Allegro con brio
32 XXI. Variation 19: Più mosso: Agitato
33 XXII. Variation 20: Più mosso
34 XXIII. Coda: Andante
35 14 Romances, Op. 34: No. 14, Vocalise
Vsevolod Zavidov (born in 2005 in Moscow) is now considered one of the most promising young pianists to emerge from the great Russian tradition. A pupil of Nelson Goerner’s, he made his name on the international stage by winning the very first Radu Lupu Prize in 2024 and the UBS Young Soloists Prize in 2025. He chose to devote his first solo recording to Rachmaninoff with three transcriptions of Bach's violin pieces, the Études-Tableaux Op. 33 and the Variations on a Theme by Corelli: "Virtually unfathomable music. Not merely a composition, but an entire mythology. Interwoven with countless links to his works of every period, it is like a cipher – filled with disguises, transformations, ironies, reminiscences... yet one and the same story," says Zavidov, who concludes this colourful programme with his own magnificent transcription of the famous Vocalise from 1912.