NADEJDA VLAEVA
A Liszt Recital
MS1063 ~ $14.95
AWARDED
INTERNATIONAL GRAND PRIX 'LISZT' DU DISQUE 2002
"From her earliest years
as a concert pianist,
Nadejda Vlaeva
has had a special affinity with the
music of Franz Liszt. By far the greater portion of her repertory is presently
devoted to the Hungarian master. She was fifteen years old when she arrived
at a major turning point in her career by winning the Gold Medal of the
International Liszt Competition in Lucca, Italy....Vlaeva's playing is
marked by a rich sound, a singing line, and an intuitive grasp of Liszt's
musical structures which in the case of his longer compositions, can be
complicated. That she has a shining technique, able to cope with any Lisztian
emergency, goes without saying."
-
Alan Walker, author of the 3-Volume,
prize winning biography of Franz Liszt.
Ms. Vlaeva has performed in concerts internationally, giving solo recitals
in Bulgaria, Russia, Slovakia, Hungary, The Netherlands, England, Canada,
and the United States. She has also appeared as soloist with the Budapest
Symphony Orchestra, the Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, the Capella Istropolitana
in Slovakia and various orchestras in Bulgaria and Holland. Her playing
has been acclaimed wherever she has appeared.
|
Lazar Berman calls her
talent
"God-given..."
Maestro Hans Graf,
"her musicality and the
depth of her interpretation amazed me. Her strong and healthy technique
was both natural and flawless."
Arnold Steinhardt, Guarneri String Quartet,
"
one of those people of extraordinary ability whom we hope for but rarely
see."
Atlanta Audio Society "...one of
the best [Liszt recitals] I've heard in years...Vlaeva shows a rare sensitivity
to every nuance"
|
Visit www.nadejdavlaeva.com
|
 |
LISTEN
|
NEED REAL AUDIO?
|
| FRANZ
LISZT
Les
Cloches de Genève (S.160 No.9)
Après
une lecture du Dante: fantasia quasi sonata
(S.161 No.7)
Venezia
e Napoli
Concert
paraphrase: “Rigoletto”
(S.434) Verdi-Liszt
Concert
Study: “Un Sospiro”
(S.144 No.3)
Schumann-Liszt:
“Liebeslied” (Widmung)
(S.566)
Concert
Study: “Gnomenreigen”
(S.145 No.2)
Hungarian
Rhapsody no. 9, in E-flat major (S.244 No.9)
|
|