Showing posts with label Eric Zeisl. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Zeisl. Show all posts

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Eric Zeisl - Piano Concerto in C major - "Pierrot in der Flasche", Suite from the Ballet - Gottlieb Wallisch, Piano - Radio-Symphonieorchester Wien, Johannes Wildner - CPO 2007

Absolutely one of my top discs of 2007, this is a complete treasure from start to finish. It's further validation that Eric Zeisl was one of the finest and most interesting of composers of the 20th century. Do not be surprised if his glorious Piano Concerto in C major become an instant favorite; it pulls the listener in with it's aural magic from the first note. "Pierrot in der Flasche" is a Suite taken from Zeisl's ballet  of the same name (Pierrot in the Flask) and is also a true delight from start to finish. It's an extremely exciting, fun and colorful score, with influences and inspiration seemingly coming from everywhere; stylistically it's a musical cornucopia that manages to jump and shift from one idea to another, yet cohesively so. Every moment of this disc holds my complete interest, and this release is one to keep nearby imo as opposed to cataloging it deep within one's library. 



Information will be added (although you are really all set as I'm including the booklet notes) when I have the time, as I have been mentioning in prior offerings..


Enjoy this gem!!

Eric_Zeisl-Piano_Concerto_Pierrot_Ballet_Suite-Tzadik.zip

http://www69.zippyshare.com/v/m5gweM8r/file.html

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Eric Zeisl - Chamber Music - Piano Trio Suite - String Quartet No. 2 - "Arrowhead" Trio for Flute, Viola and Harp - The Brandeis-Bardin Ensemble - The Debussy Trio - Harmonia Mundi France 1991

This Harmonia Mundi disc offers three chamber works by Eric Zeisl, and this is as good as chamber music gets. Such a composer was Zeisl. I will be posting all available recordings of his music, however it will only leave you wanting for more (yes that's my addiction acting up, and rehab is impossible as these are such beautiful drugs for the soul). Chagall's "The Fiddler" welcomes us on the cover to come wander, reflect, and dance with him, and this 72 minute visit is a sheer delight. A klezmorim is often not unlike the pied piper; the same can be said for the magic music of Eric Zeisl.



Zeisl composed instrumental music throughout his career, creating a total of twenty-four solo and chamber works. Written over a span of years from the 1920s to the late 1950s, the music here further reveals that Eric Zeisl bequeathed to posterity a legacy of lasting merit and intense individuality. His is a directly communicative testament of solidly crafted, expressive, beautiful music. 

The early Piano Trio Suite in B, Op. 8, was composed in 1934-24 and premiered in 1928. An astonishing work from the pen of a teenage boy, this music exhibits structural and technical principles   that Zeisl would retain throughout his career. The opening movement, Praeludium, projects on a heroic scale the modified song from favored in Zeisl's Leider. The Adagio sostenuto combines a supporting, dirge-like ostinato with an expansive string melody ("Melody is heart and you can't construct melodies," Zeisl once observed. "They are the essence of musical gift."). The third movement offers Zeisl's first essay in the Scherzo/trio form; the finale is the first preserved manifestation of of a form he wold cultivate for the rest of his life: theme and variations. Although isolated phrases of this work may remind listeners of Mahler or Richard Strauss, here already is an individual language that convincingly bridges romanticism and the Viennese avant-garde, a style in which Eastern and Western elements have begun to coalesce. It is fortunate that the Trio survives at all; the sole copy of the work disappeared in America during Zeisl's lifetime, resurfacing in December of 1979, twenty years after his death, thanks to the alertness of Music Librarian Martin Silver at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Soon after an auspicious beginning in the States, the composer found himself locked in a grim struggle for survival which left serious composition out of the question. Of great significance, therefore, were his three summers (1948-1950) as a composer-in-residence at the Brandeis Camp Institute (now the Brandeis-Bardin Institute) in Brandeis, California. During these years, Zeisl devoted his attention to absolute instrumental works, including the "Sonata Barocca" for piano, the "Brandeis" Sonata for Violin and Piano, a Viola Sonata, a Cello Sonata, and the String Quartet No. 2 
from 1952-53, a work of intensity, dramatic power, and contrapuntal sophistication. In other words-a knockout. A powerful Pesante introduction precedes the vigorous, driving Allegro first movement. The heart of the Quartet is the slow second movement, an "intimate talk between God and man" as Zeisl puts it. A Scherzo and Trio follow, with the lyrical, highly expressive trio providing a moment of repose from the scherzo's exciting headlong dash. The animated, virtuosic final, Zeisl's only sonata-rondo, displays the composer's delight in 'mirror writing', fugato, and counterpoint. This Quartet is up there imo with the finest in the 20th century repertoire.

By the mid-1950s, the composer's circumstances had improved markedly, and the future looked promising. During a summer vacation at Lake Arrowhead in the San Bernardino Mountains of Southern California, Zeisl began work on the lovely "Arrowhead" Trio for Viola, Flute and Harp, completing it in just 23 days. This serious composition stands in striking contrast to the sunny surroundings of its creation. Long aware of a heart condition, Zeisl responded not to external stimuli, but rather to an internal rhythm, one prophetic of his own early death. The trio illustrates Zeisl's conciseness of utterance, intensity of Hebraic expression, and perfection of modified song form. Premeired on January 25th, 1957, the "Arrowhead" Trio, Zeisl's last chamber work, completes in America the circle begun in Europe. 

I will write the track listing later, got to get to work!


Enjoy!

Eric_Zeisl_Chamber_Music-Tzadik.zip

http://www6.zippyshare.com/v/fewUONhw/file.html

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Eric Zeisl - Kleine Sinfonie nach Bildern der Roswitha Bitterlich - November: Six Sketches for Chamber Orchestra - Concerto Grosso for Cello and Orchestra - UCLA Philharmonia, Neal Stulberg - Antonio Lysy, Cello - Yarlung Records 2013

Eric Zeisl (1905-1959) was a remarkably talented composer active during the first half of the 20th century, and always with an original voice. His music offers a compelling fusion of Viennese, Slavic, and Hebraic stylistic elements, and he is often mentioned alongside other "Jewish composers" such as the great Ernst Bloch, Joseph Achron, Paul Ben-haim, Hans Krasa, Viktor Ullmann, and many others. 

This was/is my personal "recording of 2013" so to speak, and it's an extremely important release that helps to paint a richer portrait of this fascinating man. All three works presented here are absolute knockouts.







Eric Zeisl was born in Vienna on May 8th, 1905. From childhood, he demonstrated an unshakable resolve to compose. Against strong family resistance, he entered the Vienna State Academy at age fourteen. Two years later, his first publication appeared, a set of songs. Despite acclaim as one of Austria's brightest young compositional lights, Zeisl eventually fell victim to Europe's gathering political storm. In November of 1938, he fled Vienna for Paris and temporary refuge, but it was only upon reaching in September 1939 that he found permanent sanctuary. Against formidable odds, he achieved recognition in his adopted land, with praise for his work coming from fellow composers Korngold, Milhaud, Stravinsky, and Toch among others. Then, on February 18th 1959, at the age of 53 and at the height of his creative powers, Eric Zeisl suffered a heart attack after teaching an evening class at Los Angeles City College. He died that night.

Unhappy early years, heredity, and environment united to shape the young Zeisl's creative personality. Drawing from the vitality of Slavic peasantry and the spirituality of the synagogue, he evolved a style notable for expressive melody, rich harmonies, strong dance-derived rhythms, and as you shall hear imaginative scoring.   

The booklet notes are superb, and especially interesting is the information concerning Zeisl's inspiration to compose "Kleine Sinfonie nach Bildern der Roswitha Bitterlich" (Little Symphony after Pictures of Roswitha Bitterlich) after viewing an exhibition of paintings by a fourteen year old girl. 

Enjoy everyone!!

Zeisl_Little_Symphony_November_Sketches_Concerto Grosso-Tzadik.zip

http://www39.zippyshare.com/v/wxuAJdPq/file.html