The pianist Wilhelm Kempff (1895-1991) belonged to that tradition of
German musicians – notably including conductors such as Furtwangler,
Klemperer and Walter – for whom composition hardly less essential a
component of their musical personalities than performing, even if it was
an activity they largely undertook privately. Working day to day with
imperishable masterworks by Bach, Beethoven and Brahms, they did not
expect to meet such standards, yet their own creative voices required an
outlet through more than recreation of others. Left cold by the musical
innovations and developments of their own time in the work of
Schoenberg and Stravinsky, they wrote in a heightened Romantic idiom,
and in genres – especially song and chamber music – which lay separately
from their own professional activity as performers.
Both chamber works presented here date from Kempff’s youth. The Piano
Trio was composed in 1911, when Kempff was 16, and bears a clear
Brahmsian influence in thematic conduct and emotional landscape, through
the guidance of Kempff’s teacher Robert Kahn, who had himself been a
student of Brahms. The Quartet is scored for the more unusual
combination of flute, violin, cello and piano. It dates from 1920, and
was composed on the island of Capri during a period of recuperation from
a serious illness which had laid him low during a concert tour of
Sweden. Thus the second movement is based on a Swedish folk theme and
the finale ends with a whirlin Tarantella di Taormina, in the tradition
exemplified by Mendelssohn’s ‘Italian’ Symphony of German musicians
letting Italian sunshine into their work.
The Quartet is led by the flautist Ginevra Petrucci, who also
contributes a booklet essay on Kempff’s career as a composer to the
album. Now based in the US, Petrucci has made several well-received
recordings for Brilliant Classics, among them Romantic-era concertos by
Briccialdi and a ‘winning’ album of
chamber music by the Polish-US immigrant Robert Muczynski.
Wilhelm Kempff (1895-1991) was without doubt one of the foremost and
important pianists of the 20th century. However composing was,
especially for the young Kempff, his main artistic vocation, and he
continued composing seriously during his whole lifetime. He wrote a
substantial body of works, for piano, organ, chamber music, songs,
concertos, symphonies and even operas. His works met with considerable
success and he was championed by the likes of Furtwängler.
The piano trio in G minor is from 1911, whens only 16, however it shows a rare maturity, clearly influenced by Brahms (Kempff’s composition teacher was Robert Kahn, a pupil of Brahms). The quartet for the unusual combination of flute, violin, cello and piano was inspired by Swedish and Italian folk music, while still firmly rooted in the Late-Romantic tradition.
The piano trio in G minor is from 1911, whens only 16, however it shows a rare maturity, clearly influenced by Brahms (Kempff’s composition teacher was Robert Kahn, a pupil of Brahms). The quartet for the unusual combination of flute, violin, cello and piano was inspired by Swedish and Italian folk music, while still firmly rooted in the Late-Romantic tradition.
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