Valery Afanassiev – Franz Schubert: Moments musicaux (2012) [Official Digital Download 24bit/44,1kHz]

Valery Afanassiev – Franz Schubert: Moments musicaux (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:10:43 minutes | 542 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © ECM New Series

Pianist Valery Afanassiev – renowned for his strikingly individual and deeply introspective interpretations of the music of Franz Schubert – has paired two often extrovert works by the composer: the set of six Moments Musicaux and the Sonata D. 850. Recorded in September 2010 at the Auditorio Radiotelevisione Svizzera, Lugano, this is ECM’s second Schubert recording by the Moscow-born pianist, having previously released a live recording of Afanassiev performing Schubert’s final Sonata D. 960 at the 1986 Lockenhaus Festival that has become a connoisseur’s favourite. Composed from 1823 to 1827, the year before the composer’s premature death, the Moments Musicaux brim with song and dance, as well as Schubert’s characteristic mood swings from major to minor, from light to dark. The Sonata D. 850, written in 1825, is one of Schubert’s most ebullient piano sonatas – with yodelling-like melodies, simulated horn calls and strongly syncopated rhythms – but like so many works by this composer, there are passages with an air of nostalgia and emotional ambiguity.

Composed from 1823 to 1827, the year before the composer’s death at age 31, the Moments musicaux brim with song and dance, as well as Schubert’s characteristic mood swings from major to minor, from light to dark, often within a single piece. With its glittering surface, the brief No. 3 in F minor was one of Schubert’s more popular piano pieces for decades; but the ballroom-worthy tune has an odd tension underneath, as if the party were bound to end early. No. 1 in C Major has melodies reminiscent of the composer’s Winterreise, while the two in A-flat Major, Nos. 2 and 6, tap rich veins of melancholy, particularly in Afanassiev’s interpretations. No. 4 in C-sharp minor is another number that swirls like a woman dancing with tears in her eyes. No. 5 in F minor is the set’s lone thoroughly fast-paced number, although even its uptempo leaps have a brittle quality.

The Sonata D850, written in 1825, is one of Schubert’s most ebullient piano sonatas – with ländler-like melodies, simulated horn calls and strongly syncopated rhythms; he composed the piece over three weeks in the spa town of Gastein, so the environment undoubtedly contributed to the sonata’s high spirits. Yet, as with so many works by this composer, there are also passages in D850 pregnant with nostalgia and emotional ambiguity, especially in the Con moto second movement, which Afanassiev explores with meditative concentration.

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Valery Afanassiev – Testament (2019) [Japanese Box Set] SACD ISO + Hi-Res FLAC

Valery Afanassiev – Testament (2019) [Japanese Box Set]
SACD Rip | 6x SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 385:51 minutes | Scans included | 15,5 GB
or FLAC Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | Some Scans included | 7,55 GB

Valery Afanassiev is a Russian pianist, writer and conductor. He was the winner of the Bach Competition in Leipzig in 1968, as well as 1st prize recipient at the Concours Reine Elisabeth in Brussels in 1971. Afanassiev become widely known in the 1980s due to his musical partnership with Gidon Kremer. Their joint recordings of chamber works by Mozart, Schubert and Brahms were highly praised. His interpretations of solo piano works by Franz Schubert, Ludwig van Beethoven and the others have aroused controversy on account of Afanassiev’s tempi choices and idiosyncratic expressiveness. Afanassiev has recorded among others for such labels as Denon and Deutsche Grammophone. For this Japan only release by Sony Classical, Afanassiev performed the piano music by Haydn, Beethoven, Schubert, Debussy and Prokofiev.

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Valery Afanassiev – Valery Afanassiev Plays Mozart (2018) [Official Digital Download 24bit/96kHz]

Valery Afanassiev – Valery Afanassiev Plays Mozart (2018)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:18:19 minutes | 1,47 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Sony Classical

Valery Afanassiev on “WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART” Today we are too fond of clear-cut solutions and exhaustive explanations. Writers and film directors are supposed to shed light even on those nooks and crannies which should remain dark for the sake of perspective. And readers as well as cinema goers should remain in the dark about this and that for the sake of the same perspective, the same space, the same labyrinth. Alas, there are no more dark ladies either in sonnets or in novels. We have forgotten the aroma of unanswerable questions. And yet every masterpiece is an unanswerable question. And so is every artist of genius. In Pushkin’s short tragedy Mozart and Salieri there are many unanswerable questions. Actually it ends with such a question: ‘Is an evil deed compatible with genius?’ (Gesualdo, who was unquestionably a composer of genius, killed his wife. But does this murder answer the question?) In the opening monologue Salieri ruminates over his music-oriented life and asks a crucial question: ‘Why would God choose an obscene child to be his instrument?’ That is how Peter Shäffer formulates the same question in Amadeus. Was Mozart an obscene child? Why should God have chosen Salieri in preference to Mozart? Salieri was an honest, hardworking musician: neither Pushkin nor Shäffer deny him that. What is more, his musical erudition did not prevent him from relishing Mozart’s masterpieces with every fibre of his being (with every fibre of his soul, as the Russians would say)—a rare, priceless gift. At the end of Pushkin’s tragedy Mozart says that if everyone could feel harmony as Salieri does, the world might come to an end, no one caring about the base needs of life, everyone luxuriating in art. What a pity the world will never come to an end through art. As a matter of fact, to paraphrase T. S. Eliot, such an end might turn out to be a magnificent beginning.

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Valery Afanassiev – Ludwig van Beethoven – Pathetique, Moonlight, Appassionata (2015) DSF DSD64

Valery Afanassiev – Ludwig van Beethoven – Pathetique, Moonlight, Appassionata (2015)
DSF Stereo DSD64, 1 bit/2,82 MHz | Time – 01:15:58 minutes | 2,99 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: e-Onkyo | Front Cover | © Sony Classical

驚天動地。これがアファナシエフのベートーヴェン。来日記念盤。
現代クラシック・ピアノ界の鬼才(奇才 )と称される、ロシアのピアニスト、ヴァレリー・アファナシエフの最新アルバムです。個性派アファナシエフが、ソニー・クラシカルでの録音を熱望し、選んだ曲目はベートーヴェンの最も有名なピアノ・ソナタ「熱情」「月光」「悲愴」。ベートーヴェンはアファナシエフにとって、シューベルトやバッハとならぶ重要なレパートリーであり、「バガテル集」「ディアベリ変奏曲」「最後の3つのソナタ」など、早くからそのピアノ作品の録音に積極的に取り組んできました。そして「自分が最高の演奏ができる」という強い確信を持つまで、新しい作品をレパートリーに加えないアファナシエフが、68歳にしてこの名ソナタ3曲の録音に生涯初めて取り組みました。最近は演奏会でのライヴ録音をリリースしてきたアファナシエフですが、今回はハノーファーでのセッション録音。旧知のドイツ人の名プロデューサーで、これまで「ブラームス:間奏曲集」などの名盤を共に生み出してきたゲルハルト・ベッツを起用し、これまで聴いたことのないような解釈を生みだしました。

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