MEDTNER, Nikolai: Fairy Tale
MEDTNER, Nikolai: Fairy Tale
MEDTNER, Nikolai: Fairy Tale
2
RACHMANINOV, Sergei (18731943)
TT: 60'00
3
Nikolai Medtner
Fashions come and go, yet Medtners music is for eternity. As trite as this may
sound, it is nevertheless true: I often imagine that when the last sign of life, the last
spark in the universe has been extinguished, Medtners melodies will still somehow
continue to reverberate through the emptiness of space. Upon hearing the opening
of his Sonata-Reminiscenza, or the central theme of Canzona matinata, or even his
Op. 1, the rst piece on this disc, it becomes clear why that could be the case: once
you have become mesmerized by the harmonies, time stands still and you are
completely absorbed in the moment. I love the quote by Ivan Ilyin on Medtners
music: You may fancy that you have heard the melody before But where, when,
from whom, in childhood, in a dream, in delirium? You will puzzle your head and
strain your memory in vain: you have not heard it anywhere: in human ears it
sounds for the rst time And yet it is as though you had long been waiting for
it waiting because you knew it, not in sound, but in spirit. For the spiritual
content of the melody is universal and primordial. It conveys that feeling that this
music, so beautiful and pure-sounding in its simplicity must have always existed
somewhere, somehow yet each piece is a unique composition and it was Medtner
who managed to extract and make this music accessible to us by putting the right
notes, in the right order, on paper. There is a kind of Michelangelesque element to
this creative process: some 400 hundred years before Medtner, the multifaceted
genius Michelangelo was convinced that the task of the sculptor was not so much
to create but to free the forms that were already inside the stone: I saw the angel
in the marble and I chiselled until I set him free.
Canzona matinata and Sonata tragica, Op. 39 Nos 4 & 5 (1918 20)
Sonata tragica is part of Medtners second cycle of Forgotten Melodies, Op. 39. It
is linked to the preceding piece in the cycle, Canzona matinata, together with which
7
Medtner insisted it should be performed (perhaps because they share a theme in
their respective middle section). In the single-movement sonata, a remarkable inten-
sity of emotion is concentrated. Typically for Medtner, its two apparently contrast-
ing main themes eventually prove to be different guises of one and the same
material. The rst theme starts abruptly, a blow of fate, while the second is con-
solatory and gentle. Emotionally, the sonata offers little respite. The tension mounts
especially in the recapitulation, and the work moves inexorably towards a
devastating coda, which concludes with another blow, like the one with which the
sonata began.
10
BIS-1848 SACD inlay.qxp_Layout 1 22/07/2015 09:07 Page 1
BIS-1848 | SACD
-1848 SACD
Nikolai Medtner (1880 1951)
1) Prologue from Stimmungsbilder, Op. 1 3'45
2) Fairy Tale, Op. 51 No. 3 3'24
3) Sonata-Reminiscenza, Op. 38 No. 1 13'09
7
TT: 60'00
318599 918488
Yevgeny Sudbin piano
Recording producers: Marion Schwebel, Jens Braun this hybrid disc plays on both cd & sacd players
9 & 2015, BIS Records AB sacd surround / sacd stereo / cd stereo