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Medtner - Forgotten Melodies I, Op.38

Nikolai Karlovich Medtner (5 January 1880 – 13 November 1951) Forgotten Melodies I, Op.38 Geoffrey Tozer (piano) 0:02 - 1. Sonata reminiscenza 13:01 - 2. Danza graziosa 15:54 - 3. Danza festiva 21:16 - 4. Canzona fluviala 23:51 - 5. Danza rustica 26:28 - 6. Canzona serenata 30:13 - 7. Danza silvestra 33:50 - 8. Alla reminiscenza The 8 pieces of the first cycle of Forgotten Melodies are given a certain coherence as a group by a number of thematic cross-references, particularly to the cycle’s motto, the melodically memorable opening paragraph of the single-movement Sonata-Reminiscenza. The ‘recollection’ of the work’s title, perhaps Medtner’s reflection on his own difficult life and imminent departure from his homeland, is a melancholy one. After the exposition of the sonata’s two main subjects, rounded off by the motto theme, the development intensifies the mood of haunted anguish, culminating in two arpeggiate cries of despair. The prevailing gloom is only briefly lifted by a brighter new theme unexpectedly introduced into the recapitulation, after which the motto of recollection is heard once more, bringing the work to a pensive close. 2 dances follow: Danza graziosa, in which the high spirits of the syncopated dance melody are unexpectedly dampened by the stern and very Russian theme of the middle section; and the smiling Danza festiva, said to be an impression of a village festival and possibly inspired by a painting by the Flemish artist Teniers. The same bells that ring out in the opening bars also launch the fourth piece, the plaintive Canzona fluviala (‘River song’), in which there is no obvious connection between content and title beyond the flowing accompaniment. Danza rustica, with its simple melody over a hypnotic drone bass, seems to evoke a country scene on a lazy summer’s day, while Canzona serenata (‘Night song’), opened and closed by the motto of recollection, is a plangent song, whose vaguely Latin air and consecutive thirds in the harmonization of its melody make it a distant cousin of Mendelssohn’s Venetian Gondola Song. In the penultimate piece, Danza silvestra (‘Forest dance’), the gnarled syncopation of the first theme, perhaps conjuring up a picture of malevolent wood-sprites, gives way in the central section to a lyrical dance. At the end, another passing reference to the motto of recollection leads without a pause to Alla Reminiscenza, which rounds off the cycle in a mood of calm detachment with the theme with which it began, now at last in the major key. Source: https://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dw... Source videos: 1. Sonata reminiscenza (Part 1):    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   Sonata reminiscenza (Part 2):    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   2. Danza graziosa:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   3. Danza festiva:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   4. Canzona fluviala:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   5. Danza rustica:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   6. Canzona serenata:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   7. Danza silvestra:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...   8. Alla reminiscenza:    • Medtner - Forgotten Melodies Op.38 - ...  

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