Maria Lettberg - Poeme de l'Extase - Piano music by Scriabin, Liszt, Messiaen etc.
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Catalogue No: ES2058
Barcode: 4015372820589
Latvian-born pianist Maria Lettberg confesses to being addicted to the music of Alexander Scriabin. To mark the 100th anniversary of his death, she releases a very personal homage in which his orchestral 'Po�me de l'extase' (in a highly-demanding transcription for solo piano) takes centre stage, alongside pieces by Liszt and Messiaen, and a pair - by Harald Banter and by Manfred Kelkel - both based on the Russian's music.
Scriabin's large-scale orchestral work, 'Po�me de l'extase', completed in 1908, is a piece that Maria Lettberg feels reflects his entire creative output. The poem on which it is based tells of a spirit which soars upwards, seemingly to new spheres of consciousness. Lettberg views this idea of ecstasy in Scriabin's work not only as breaking free, but also as yearning and in a theosophical sense, the creation of the universe as an erotic act.
Olivier Messiaen was not a Scriabinite, but the aesthetic connections are clearly recognisable: synaesthesia, a penchant for orientalism and pantheism, and the creation of a new world vision - the world of ecstasy. Lettberg's choice of the first and last pieces from Messiaen's great piano cycle of 1944, 'Vingt regards sur l'enfant-J�sus', leads the listener into a world of religious intoxication. And in Franz Liszt's 'La lugubre gondola', written in mourning for Richard Wagner, one can also hear ecstasy - Liszt's later works exhibit many parallels to Scriabin.
Musicologist and Scriabin researcher Manfred Kelkel's 'Tombeau de Scriabine' was commissioned in 1972 by Radio France for the 100th anniversary of Scriabin's birth. 'Na�tre et dispara�tre' by jazz musician Harald Banter, composed in 2008 a hundred years after 'Po�me de l'extase' and dedicated to Lettberg, grapples with Scriabin's idea of the act of creation in the cosmos.
Maria Lettberg has recorded two previous CDs for ES-Dur, both widely praised. The first 'Opus Posthum' features the early piano music of Scriabin while 'The Enchanted Garden' comprises piano transcriptions of stage works by Glinka, Rimsky-Korsakov and Stravinsky.
Personnel: Maria Lettberg (piano)