Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28

On this CD:

1. Variations and Fugue, for piano in C Major
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

2. Grotesque Piano Pieces (6) Wurstelprater
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

3. Grotesque Piano Pieces (6) Official reception
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

4. Grotesque Piano Pieces (6) A Nocturne Adventure
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

5. Suite on the Name Szegoe, for piano
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

6. Irrelohe Foxtrott, for piano
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

7. Piano Sonata No. 3
Composed by Felix Petyrek
Performed by Kolja Lessing

Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28, Music, Felix Petyrek, Kolja Lessing, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Keyboard, Music for Keyboard
Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28

    Manufacturer: EDA
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    General ModernGeneral Modern | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Keyboard | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B00006C6LU
    Release Date: 2000-01-01
    Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28
    Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    • The welcome rediscovery of a forgotten composer from the 1920s, not always of striking individuality
    Felix Petyrek: Piano Music, 1915-28

    Manufacturer: Eda Edition Abseits
    ProductGroup: Music
    Binding: Audio CD

    Chamber MusicChamber Music | Forms & Genres | Classical (c.1770-1830) | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    General ModernGeneral Modern | Modern, 20th, & 21st Century | Historical Periods | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Keyboard | Instruments | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Classical | Styles | Music
    GeneralGeneral | Chamber Music | Classical | Styles | Music
    ASIN: B000056QGQ
    Release Date: 2001-01-30

    Tracks:

    1. Vars And Fugue In C: Theme And Vars
    2. Vars And Fugue In C: Fugue
    3. Six Grotesque Pno Pieces: Wurstelprater
    4. Six Grotesque Pno Pieces: Official Reception
    5. Six Grotesque Pno Pieces: A Nocturne Adventure
    6. Ste On The Name Szegoe: Toccata
    7. Ste On The Name Szegoe: Allemande
    8. Ste On The Name Szegoe: Courante
    9. Ste On The Name Szegoe: Sarabande
    10. Ste On The Name Szegoe: Gigue
    11. Irrelohe Foxtrott
    12. Son No.3: Allegro Vivo (Ma Non Troppo)
    13. Son No.3: Andante Con Moto
    14. Son No.3: Misurato, Non Allegro
    15. Son No.3: Rondo. Presto

    Customer Reviews:

    4 out of 5 stars The welcome rediscovery of a forgotten composer from the 1920s, not always of striking individuality.......2007-04-09

    In the summer of 1922 (as he recalls in his (in)famous autobiography, which I've been reading as part of a thorough survey of his life and works), young George Antheil (he was born in 1900), the self-styled "Bad Boy of Music", was picked up by the then famous American concert agent Martin Hanson and, after a successful opening concert at London's Wigmore Hall, went on to Germany. There, he stopped at the first "First International Festival of Modern Music" in Donaueschningen, organized by the wealthy Prince of Fürstenberg - all expenses paid. He was hoping to meet there "practically every important musician of Europe", thereby giving him a chance to introduce "an absolutely unknown young American pianist-composer upon them all at one fell swoop". However, upon his arrival he was disappointed to discover that, instead of an "international" gathering, only composers and conductors from the Austrian-German area had responded to the invitation. So what he heard were concerts with works by "Berg, Petyrek, Webern, Krenek, Hindemith, Schöenberg, Rathaus".

    Now wait a minute.

    Berg, Webern, Schönberg, Hindemith, Krenek, fine: these are well-known quantities. Even the Polish Karol Rathaus has undergone something like a small rediscovery, thanks to the "Degenerate Music" fad of these last fifteen years (a search on the present website yields over 10 results).

    But Petyrek?

    So I thought I'd investigate, and this is the one disc that a search yielded.

    Who was Petyrek, then?

    Felix Petyrek was born in 1892 in Brünn, Moravia, then part of the Austrian Empire (now Brno in the Czech Republic, also the birthplace of Janacek and Mies van der Rohe) and became a composition student of the then famous Franz Schreker at the Vienna Conservatory (also a teacher of Krenek, Haba and Rathaus), while studying piano with Leopold Godowsky and Emil Sauer. After the 1st World War he came to be viewed as one of the main proponents of new music (both as a composer and a concert pianist), while holding various teaching positions (of piano, composition and theory) in Salzburg, Berlin, Athens, Stuttgart, Leipzig and Vienna, and getting closely associated with the Anthroposophical movement of Rudolf Steiner in Dornach, Switzerland. The rise of Nazism thwarted his career, worsened by his poor health, bouts of depression and dire financial situation. He died in Vienna in 1951 and fell into oblivion.

    That said, the works gathered on this CD, all composed between 1915 and 1928 (and all premiere recordings but for one short piece), rarely show a composer of striking individuality. In their tribute paid to Bach, both the 1915 Variations and Fugue in C-major and 1924 Suite on the Name Szegoe show a strong affinity to the music of Max Reger. The 1922 Irrelohe Foxtrott is a short and unsubstantial take-off from the opera of Schreker, with whom Petyrek was by then estranged. The three (out of six) "Grostesques", from 1919 and 1920 are much in the same mood, picturesque mocks of a Viennese Waltz in "Wurstelprater", of the "Official Reception" of some "Highness" and of an unspecified "Nocturnal Adventure" (but with "howling" as one of the performance indications to give us a hint), sounding like the kind of parodies of "Bourgeois" music Hindemith or Satie composed at the same time. One regrets that Kolja Lessing didn't record all six.

    The compact (14') 3rd Sonata from 1928 is a much more interesting and individual work. With its forward-moving, muscular march-like rhythms, the first movement evokes the War-Sonatas of Prokoviev (written some 15 years later, of course). The short (2:30) second movement, "Andante con moto", features elaborate counterpoint with terse left-hand and enigmatic and fascinating right hand filigree. The third movement is another muscular, march-like movement, with a central section of striking originality, featuring a rapidly ascending and descending ostinato scale played staccato by the right hand. In the Rondo finale, the quasi clockwork melody kept in the piano's high register again evokes some Prokoviev or even Bartok.

    Born in 1961 in Germany, Kolja Lessing appears to be equally proficient at the piano and the violin (which is the instrument he teaches, now in Stuttgart, after Leipzig and Würzburg). He (for he is a "he", as his personal name might not indicate) has been an active advocate of the rediscovery of forgotten composers from the first half of the 20th Century, Philipp Jarnach & Berthold Goldschmidt being the less obscure. He contributes himself the excellent and thoroughly informative program notes.

    Music Track:

    1. Franz Mittler
    2. From Bourbon Street to Paradise: The French Opera House of New Orleans and its Singers, 1859 - 1919
    3. Gilbert: Dream Carousels & other works
    4. Hugo Distler: Liturgische Sätze
    5. Johann Strauss & Family In London
    6. Karol Szymanowski: Sonata for Violin & Piano, Op. 9; Nocturne and Tarantella, Op. 28; Three Myths, Op. 30
    7. Koechlin: Pieces Op179; Sonata for oboe Op58
    8. Konzerte für Schweizer Volksmusikinstrumente
    9. Lebendige Vergangenheit: Riccardo Stracciari, Vol. 2
    10. Liszt: Funérailles, Ballade No. 2, etc.

    Music Track

    music track

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