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Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.1 (2017)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.1 (2017)

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.1 (2017)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 212 Mb | Total time: 66:47 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 10950 | Recorded: 2017

The Serbian-American Paris-based pianist Ivan Ilic has signed a new multi-album recording contract with Chandos Records, following internationally acclaimed recordings of works by Godowsky and Feldman. His first project on the label is a series devoted to the solo piano works of the Czech composer Antoine Reicha, a contemporary and lifelong friend of Beethoven. Although best known for his contributions to the repertoire for wind quintet, Reicha wrote vast quantities of solo piano music, most of which has never been recorded. The manuscripts, preserved in the Bibliotheque nationale de France, were published only recently.

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.3 (2021)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.3 (2021)

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.3 (2021)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 299 Mb | Total time: 86:50 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 20194 | Recorded: 2020

For this his third volume of works by Antoine Reicha, the pianist Ivan Ilic turns to one of the composer’s most extraordinary works, L’Art de varier, Op. 57. ‘The Art of Variation’ consists of fifty-seven variations on a theme (that the number of variations match the opus number is not a coincidence) and was composed in 1802 – 03, at the beginning of the six-year period which Reicha spent in Vienna, where he studied with Haydn and re-kindled his previous friendship with Beethoven. The set is remarkable for its scale and invention. Ivan Ilic describes the work as the missing link between Bach’s ‘Goldberg’ Variations and Beethoven’s ‘Diabelli’ Variations, which was certainly influenced by Reicha’s work. The recording was made at Potton Hall in Suffolk, on a Steinway Model D grand piano.

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.2 (2018)

Posted By: ArlegZ
Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.2 (2018)

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol.2 (2018)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 212 Mb | Total time: 62:35 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Chandos | # CHAN 20033 | Recorded: 2018

The eagerly awaited volume 2 in the fascinating exploration of Antoine Reicha's keyboard music by the trailblazing pianist Ivan Ilic is now out! Ilic here digs into a crucial aspect of Antoine Reicha's music: counterpoint and the manner in which Bach's music served as a point of departure for Reicha's eclectic, fertile mind and wide variety of musical styles. If most of these etudes are made up of a Prelude paired with a Fugue, their variety offers the album great diversity, and unveils the compositional genius of Antoine Reicha: here are unexpected moods and textures, sophisticated canons, cheeky invertible counterpoint, chaconnes and minuet-like character pieces, even a piece the only unifying characteristic of which seems to be its tumbling scales in dotted rhythm.

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol. 3 (2021)

Posted By: delpotro
Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol. 3 (2021)

Ivan Ilić - Reicha Rediscovered, Vol. 3 (2021)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 240 Mb | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 205 Mb | Digital booklet | 01:26:49
Classical | Label: Chandos Records

For this his third volume of works by Antoine Reicha, the pianist Ivan Ilic turns to one of the composer’s most extraordinary works, L’Art de varier, Op. 57. ‘The Art of Variation’ consists of fifty-seven variations on a theme (that the number of variations match the opus number is not a coincidence) and was composed in 1802 – 03, at the beginning of the six-year period which Reicha spent in Vienna, where he studied with Haydn and re-kindled his previous friendship with Beethoven. The set is remarkable for its scale and invention. Ivan Ilic describes the work as the missing link between Bach’s ‘Goldberg’ Variations and Beethoven’s ‘Diabelli’ Variations, which was certainly influenced by Reicha’s work. The recording was made at Potton Hall in Suffolk, on a Steinway Model D grand piano.