Sergei Bortkiewicz - 3 Pieces op. 24 (Somero)

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JacobNX

JacobNX

Күн бұрын

Sergiusz Bortkiewicz - Trzy utwory
Published in 1922
Pianist - Jouni Somero
0:00 - I. Nocturne (Diana)
6:03 - II. Grotesque Waltz (Satyr)
9:54 - III. Impromptu (Eros)
Biography
Sergei Bortkiewicz (1877-1952) was born into a Polish noble family in Kharkov which was then a part of the Russian Empire. His love for music and his talent was given to him by his mother, Sofia, who was a co-founder of the Kharkov school of music [1]. Growing up, he received a humanities education as well as a musical one, and he stopped just short of receiving a doctorate in Law to focus on music [1].
His musical education took place at home, then in St. Petersburg under Anatoly Lyadov and Karl von Arek, and finally in Leipzig under Alfred Reisenauer and Salomon Jadassohn. From 1904 to 1914, he lived in Berlin to focus on composing.
Unfortunately, life in the 20th Century would prove exceedingly complicated and perilous for Bortkiewicz. After the beginning of the First World War, Bortkiewicz was deported back to Russia, where just shortly afterwards, the Bolsheviks would seize power. Communists had occupied his family's estate at Artemovka, so they were only able to move back once the White Army had taken the territory. The respite was short, as the Bolsheviks would retake Kharkov soon after. Almost everything from the estate had been looted anyways, and his mother and sister, Vera, would soon die of Typhus.
Having very little left, Bortkiewicz did the sensible thing and escaped via Yalta to Istanbul, where he began impressing the locals and the many ambassadors at the embassies. The Yugoslav ambassador, Natalie Chaponitsch, arranged for Borkiewicz and his wife to obtain Yugoslav visas, moving to Belgrade at the first opportunity. For a while, the Bortkiewicz family considered staying permanently in Jugoslavia, but they decided against it and decided to wait to get Austrian visas instead [2].
Bortkiewicz was finally able to settle in Vienna and was given Austrian Citizenship. He lived there for five years only to move back to Germany whence he was cast out again by the Nazis, which was a disaster for his musical career. The Nazis began deleting his name from programmes, and at the outbreak of World War 2, they destroyed many of his scores. He returned to Vienna to stay, being kept afloat by his friend Hugo Von Dalen, thanks to whom, we still have most of Bortkiewicz's scores.
Bibliography:
[1] A. Kościelak-Nadolska, Życie i twórczość Sergiusza Bortkiewicza (1877-1952), cz. I - Sylwetka artysty,. „Notes Muzyczny”, nr 1 (5) 2016
The rest of the biographical info comes from Wikipedia

Пікірлер: 12
@adeemuff
@adeemuff Жыл бұрын
The impromptu (Eros) made me think about Blumenfeld's Etude de Concert.
@alancorley6455
@alancorley6455 3 ай бұрын
The first & third of these are exquisite ! Would love to hear these as spectacular encores
@Xyriak
@Xyriak 7 ай бұрын
the nocturne is so beautiful
@JouniSomeroMusic
@JouniSomeroMusic Жыл бұрын
😇Great job!
@jacobnx
@jacobnx Жыл бұрын
Same to you!
@emilyhutjes
@emilyhutjes 9 ай бұрын
How unknown but so very beautiful and thank you for posting this. ♥🌷🌷🌷(Netherlands)
@wrrichardson
@wrrichardson Жыл бұрын
Impromptu resemblant of Blumenfeld's Etude de Concert, Op. 24.
@AsrielKujo
@AsrielKujo Жыл бұрын
yeah it's like .. literally the same
@welcherg
@welcherg Жыл бұрын
some parts sound like literal transpositions Bortkiewcz was never the most original composer
@a-trainstudios2360
@a-trainstudios2360 Жыл бұрын
The ending of the impromptu sounds a lot like Rachmaninoff, yet it has a character of its own at the same time
@fredericscriabinoff7612
@fredericscriabinoff7612 7 ай бұрын
Yes! And some Scriabin references as well, like the mystic chord
@robert-skibelo
@robert-skibelo Жыл бұрын
The staccato marks in e.g. the 5th bar and second-last bar of the Nocturne are puzzling. They didn't seem to have any audible effect, and I think the performer may even have pedalled them. Since they're under a slur, I can't guess what the composer intended.
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