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Title - Resonance
Artist - Benjamin Hochman

In his late piano sonatas, Beethoven created music of extraordinary originality, simultaneously looking far into the future and far into the past. Pianist Benjamin Hochman pays homage to this Janus-faced aspect with the inclusion of two works from the Renaissance alongside Shadowlines from 2001.

As Hochman writes: ‘Beethoven achieves a kind of timelessness, stretching to the limit what music can say. He looks far into the future by striving for ever richer sounds, conceiving powerfully original musical ideas, and building masterful musical structures. He looks far into the past by integrating traditional forms such as variations and fugue, reflecting earlier musical styles, even quoting fleeting musical motives from Bach. But most of all, he transcends any particular era by exploring emotions both primal and sublime.’

The first Renaissance piece is the motet Ave Christe, attributed to Josquin de Prez, the Franco-Flemish composer frequently compared to Beethoven by virtue of his wide-ranging impact. Hochman plays a piano transcription made in 1988 by American composer Charles Wuorinen.

Flow, my tears – the lamenting melody that best represents the signature melancholia of the English Renaissance figure John Dowland – originated as a solo lute song and was published under the title Lachrimae in 1596. Its popularity led to a plethora of arrangements around Europe, including the one Hochman has chosen by Dowland’s elder contemporary, William Byrd.

The album’s most recently composed music is Shadowlines, a set of six preludes written by Sir George Benjamin. It uses a variety of canonic techniques that unfold subliminally, echoes concealed by echoes. Benjamin follows Beethoven’s cue in repurposing old techniques – including a passacaglia in the longest of the set – as conveyors of new revelations.

‘This program is a journey from darkness to light, a study in contrasts that nevertheless finds resonance across the centuries, ultimately finding transcendence and even triumph’, Benjamin Hochman concludes.

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN (1770–1827)
Piano Sonata No. 30 in E Major, Op. 109
1. I. Vivace, ma non troppo, sempre legato – Adagio espressivo
2. II. Prestissimo
3. III. Gesangvoll, mit innigster Empfindung. Andante molto cantabile ed espressivo

JOSQUIN DES PREZ (c.1450/55–1521); arr. Charles Wuorinen (1938–2020)
4. Ave Christe (arr. by Charles Wuorinen)

GEORGE BENJAMIN (b.1960)
Shadowlines, Six Canonic Preludes for Piano
5. I. Cantabile
6. II. Wild
7. III. Scherzando
8. IV. Tempestoso
9. V. Very Freely – Faster but Calm – Spacious and Solemn
10. VI. Gently Flowing, Flexible

JOHN DOWLAND (1563–1626); arr. William Byrd (1543–1623)
11. Pavane Lachrymae, P. 15/MB54 (arr. William Byrd)

LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
Piano Sonata No. 31 in A Flat Major, Op. 110
12. I. Moderato cantabile molto espressivo
13. II. Allegro molto
14. III. Adagio ma non troppo-Arioso dolente–Fuga-Allegro ma non troppo

This immaculately woven new recording opens on Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 30 in E Major, Op. 109, and the veritably glistening Vivace, ma non troppo, sempre legato – Adagio espressivo, the sterner fare of Prestissimo, and then comes the delightfully dulcet majesties within Gesangvoll, mit innigster Empfindung. Andante molto cantabile ed espressivo.

Up next is Josquin Des Prez’s hauntingly ethereal, yet latterly embodied Ave Christe, which is followed seamlessly by George Benjamin’s Shadowlines, Six Canonic Preludes for Piano, which opens on the pensively curious Cantabile, then brings us the delicately stoic Wild, the quietly flourishing Scherzando, the profound Tempestoso, closing on the gossamer found within Very Freely – Faster but Calm – Spacious and Solemn and the delicate daintiness of Gently Flowing, Flexible.

Along next we are treated to John Dowland’s luxurious Pavane Lachrymae, P. 15/MB54, with the new collection closing on Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 31 in A Flat Major, Op. 110, beginning with the pure gossamer of Moderato cantabile molto espressivo, then comes the preciseness of Allegro molto, finally bringing us the shimmering Adagio ma non troppo-Arioso dolente–Fuga-Allegro ma non troppo.

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