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Echoes - Bach’s Breath & Chopin
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 2/14/2025

Echoes - Bach’s Breath & Chopin
- Format: CD
- Release Date: 2/14/2025
- Composers: Frederic Chopin, Johann Sebastian Bach
- Label: Musicaphon
- UPC: 4012476569932
- Item #: 2681556X
- Genre: Classical Artists
- Release Date: 2/14/2025

Product Notes
Chopin is said to have played in time (the metronome was always on the instrument), his left hand relentlessly keeping the tempo. Students also reported that he never played a piece in the same way, and that each performance produced a different result. And yet the composer's rubato playing was by no means as free as it is today. There are no reports of Chopin's playing of Bach in particular, but his admiration for the composer is certain. We therefore put the legend that he himself - according to his own statement - played only Bach for fourteen days before a concert into perspective and simply imagine that he worked intensively on "Bach" before his already rare performances. We can assume that the preludes and fugues of the "Well-Tempered Clavier", some of which are also heard in this project, were the focus of his interest. A closer look at Chopin's works, especially those of a smaller dimension, repeatedly catches the eye of modules that we think we already know from Bach. Individual bars of the Preludes op. 28 (1836-1839) and Etudes (op. 10 no. 4) (1833 / 1837) could be retransformed into a nucleus in Bach's character with just a few "hand movements". Chopin's veneration of Bach preserved these highly condensed musical tools of the Baroque composer well into the Romantic century. He still used them in his late works, such as his last Nocturne in E major, which in a sense takes stock of "Bach". This recording, which feels entirely experimental, aims to create a unique musical experience through the direct connection of tonal, for example key, variations. The sound of some structurally related works clearly shows how much Chopin was influenced by Bach's work, whose formal stability with it's geometric structures often prevented him from sowing too much "tinsel, trinkets and pearls", something Robert Schumann once had the courage to accuse his rival of. The aim of this project tempted us to play "Chopin like Bach" here and there and to achieve the greatest possible transparency with extremely economical use of the pedal. Above all, to breathe Chopin's breath into Bach's melodic beauties with a "romantic" touch. The approximately 40-year-old Steinway B grand piano was chosen because of it's slim bass section.