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Leif Ove Andsnes - Pictures Reframed (Deluxe edition with DVD and CD) album flac

Leif Ove Andsnes - Pictures Reframed (Deluxe edition with DVD and CD) album flac Performer: Leif Ove Andsnes
Title: Pictures Reframed (Deluxe edition with DVD and CD)
Released: 2009
MP3 album: 1964 mb
FLAC album: 1661 mb
Rating: 4.1
Other formats: TTA DXD VQF AHX DMF MP2 WMA
Genre: Classical

Pictures Reframed" is a media project that materialized in 2008 to bring together Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes and South African visual artist Robin Rhode. Andsnes himself wanted a collaboration with an artist from another art medium; the choice of a visual artist for Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition thus seems quite natural. Mussorgsky himself found inspiration for his piano suite in the paintings of Russian painter Viktor Hartmann

Enhanced CD - EMI Classics, Warner Classics.

Fri, Jan 8, 2010, 00:00. Dublin was not on the itinerary for Norwegian pianist Leif-Ove Andsnes’s Pictures Reframedtour, a multimedia version of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition, coupled with Schumann’s Kinderszenen, and with video by South African artist Robin Rhode. Like a number of other pianists, Andsnes sees the pianistic crudeness of Mussorgsky’s writing as a fault, and fixes the music by fleshing much of it out with conventional techniques and patterns.

At a showcase of the project at the Southbank Centre on 26 October, Andsnes said that he and Rhode wanted music and art to be equal partners in the project. He explained that there will be someone backstage following a score to match the film to the music, allowing Andsnes to interpret the music as he wishes for each performance

Some artists announce their arrival on the world stage with a youthful fire and passion that settles into a more sedate maturity.

UPDATE ON MOZART MOMENTUM 1785/86 MAY TOUR Leif Ove Andsnes is recovering from pneumonia and with enormous regret must withdraw from his remaining concerts on the Mozart Momentum 1785/1786 tour with the Mahler Chamber Orchestra in France and Portugal

Andsnes performing Pictures Reframed at the Risør Chamber Music Festival (June 2009). Here, the rostrum is - compared to Brussels - much better illuminated. The DVD and CD release. Pictures Reframed was recorded at the Risør Chamber Music Festival, June 2009 (DVD) and Henry Wood Hall, London, December and June 2009 (CD).

Listen to music from Leif Ove Andsnes. Find the latest tracks, albums, and images from Leif Ove Andsnes. Mussorgsky: Pictures Reframed. The Very Best of: Leif Ove Andsnes.

Leif Ove Andsnes embarks on a major project which marks a new departure for the internationally acclaimed pianist and exclusive EMI Classics artist. Together with South African-born visual artist Robin Rhode he has created a special programme entitled Pictures Reframed which centres around Mussorgskys epic piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition combining music, film and still imagery.

Leif Ove Andsnes is Norway's foremost pianist. His repertoire is large; with the music of Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg as a touchstone, it has been centered on the core Romantic piano repertory but has extended back to Mozart and forward into the 20th century.

Tracklist

1 Promenade 1:21
2 Gnomus 2:27
3 Promenade 0:50
4 Il Vecchio Castillo (The Old Castle) 4:18
5 Promenade 0:31
6 Tuileries / Dispute D'Enfants Après Jeux (Dispute Between Children At Play) 1:00
7 Bydlo (The Ox Cart) 2:34
8 Promenade 0:38
9 Ballet Of The Unhatched Chicks 1:15
10 Samuel Goldberg And Schmuÿle 2:15
11 Promenade 0:38
12 Limoges - Le Marché La Grande Nouvelle (The Market At Limoges - The Great News) 1:27
13 Catacombae (Sepulcrum Romanum) Con Mortuis In Lingua Mortua 4:03
14 The Hut On Fowl's Legs 3:25
15 The Grate Gate Of Kiev 4:31
16 Nurse And I 1:17
17 First Punishment (Nurse Shuts Me In A Dark Room) 1:27
18 Rêverie 4:37
19 Near The Southern Shore Of The Crimea 2:55
20 Von Fremden Ländern Und Menschen (Of Foreign Lands And Peoples) 1:34
21 Kuriose Geschichte (A Curious Story) 1:05
22 Hasche-Mann (Blind Man's Bluff) 0:33
23 Bittendes Kind (Pleading Child) 0:56
24 Glückens Genug (Happiness) 1:13
25 Wichtige Begebenheit (An Important Event) 1:00
26 Träumerei (Dreaming) 2:49
27 Am Kamin (At The Fireside) 0:57
28 Ritter Vom Steckenpferd (Knight Of The Hobbyhorse) 0:39
29 Fast Zu Ernst (Almost Too Serious) 1:51
30 Fürchtenmachen (Frightening) 1:43
31 Kind Im Einschlummern (Child Falling Asleep) 2:24
32 Der Dichter Spricht (The Poet Speaks) 2:19

Credits

  • Composed By – Modest Mussorgsky (tracks: (tracks: 1 to 19)), Robert Schumann (tracks: (tracks: 20 to 32))
  • Design – Georgina Curtis
  • Edited By – Simon Kiln
  • Engineer – Arne Akselberg
  • Piano – Leif Ove Andsnes
  • Producer – John Fraser
  • Production Manager – Kerry Brown

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5099996700525
Comments: (1)
Gnng
"Pictures Reframed" is a media project that materialized in 2008 to bring together Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes and South African visual artist Robin Rhode. Andsnes himself wanted a collaboration with an artist from another art medium; the choice of a visual artist for Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition thus seems quite natural. Mussorgsky himself found inspiration for his piano suite in the paintings of Russian painter Viktor Hartmann. In a way, Pictures Reframed works as the reverse process in which Mussorgsky's music would inspire the visual artist to come up with new images of his own (of course after research on the original composition itself).EMI classics has released both the standard CD release of Andsnes's performance of Pictures at an Exhibition (coupled with Schumann's Kinderszenen) and this deluxe edition which includes the same CD recording, a DVD with a complete performance of Pictures Reframed at the Risor Festival, a documentary on the realization of the project and a book with color prints of Robin Rhode's images used for the performances. The deluxe edition is indeed quite a staggeringly elaborate object.The main reason for anyone to purchase this extravagant CD/DVD/Artwork combo in the first place is of course Leif Ove Andsnes's interpretation of Mussorgsky's most famous piano composition. Andsnes gives a very strong performance that combines passion, warmth and elegance. As is confirmed by his Rachmaninoff recordings, Andsnes is quite at home in Russian piano music. His playing is characterized by completely assured technique, beautiful singing tone, unfailing innate musicality and a control that prevents any harshness in sound. He characterizes every single movement without ever "getting in the way". Highlights include a colorful Gnomus, a playful Tuileries, a shimmering Con mortuis and a Gate of Kiev that properly serves as the entire suite's climax. Andsnes slightly downplays the aggressiveness and violence of the work, favoring musical flow over flashy show-off, but his eschewal of eccentric touches results in possibly one of the safest, most pleasing interpretations on disc. Andsnes admits to making his own alterations to the score to enhance Mussorgsky's piano writing, pointing out Horowitz's transcriptions as his own inspiration. These minor changes to the score might irritate some listeners; but let's admit that Mussorgsky's writing in Pictures is not completely idiomatic in the first place, and we can rest assured that in Andsnes's playing they sound as natural and inspired as they can be. Andsnes's live performance on the DVD is even finer than the studio recording. His performance of Schumann's Kinderszenen is similarly accomplished, but could benefit from more variation in tone and color.The accompanying DVD is possibly the raison d'etre for this release; it is wonderfully resourceful. We get a full performance of Andsnes and Rhode's project at the Risor Chamber Music Festival in the summer of 2009. The whole concept is more straightforward than it sounds from the marketing: Robin Rhode's idea is to stage a group of screens around Andsnes's piano, the central screen being the one on which his images are projected. Robin Rhode's contribution is a mixture of still images, digital animation and live videos aimed to enhance Mussorgsky's music. Being an expert on street art and graffiti, Rhode's style is clearly demonstrated in his images. The best moments take place when Rhode actively deviates from the imagery that the titles allude to; when he does not do so (such as in The Hut on Fowl's Legs) the results are one-dimensional and almost funny. The different figures that Rhode creates for the Promenades are very inspired, so are the different setups for Limoges, Tuileries and the Ballet of Unhatched Chicks. The final video for Great Gate of Kiev of a piano being drowned in a dock in Bergen is awe-inspiring, almost threatening to turn the cycle's apotheosis into mere background music.Think of the whole thing as an updated opera staging, whose very creativity might put off the more conservative audiences. While the project is apparently meant to make Mussorgsky's work more accessible for younger audiences, much of it relies on abstraction, which I think will narrow the audience down even further. This being said, Pictures Reframed is indeed an excellent rethinking of Mussorgsky's composition.The main challenge in all performances is to make Andsnes's playing match the images being projected. It is a very difficult task, considering that performers can't give the exact same performance everytime. This is fully explained in the feature documentary, which follows the development of the project from its very first steps to the first performance at the Risor Festival. Other than focusing on the project, we are also presented with a brief summary of Andsnes's career as the pianist arrives in different cities. Both Adsnes and Rhode emerge as creative, funny and sympathetic characters. Although the documentary is by itself beautifully made and quite touching, the narration sounds somewhat reality-TV-ish. It ends up making Rhode sound like a musical philistine and Andsnes seem like he's not entirely happy with the final results.The printed images in the book range from stunning to looking like DVD captures. Other than the color prints (which are all on the DVD of course), the book itself gives only the tracklisting, Leif Ove Adnsnes's view on Mussorgsky's music and Robin Rhode's texts explaining his individual images for each movement of Pictures at an Exhibition. Nothing is given on the composition history of Mussorgsky's (and Schumann's) pieces. That comes either in the CD release, or via Internet access with a code provided in the book. What can I say, even deluxe editions aren't that complete. In short, despite minor flaws, this edition definitely gives musically strong performances and a refreshing view on the performance of familiar classical repertoire in our times.