Nikolai Kapustin: Sinfonietta, Op. 49

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Composer:
Nikolai Kapustin (1937-2020)

Date of composition:
1986

Performers:
Masahiro Kawakami & Yukari Kawakami
(from the album "Kapustin Chamber Music 1")

Date of recording:
2010

I. Overture. Allegro (0:00)
II. Slow Waltz. Larghetto (5:33)
III. Intermezzo. Allegretto (9:34)
IV. Rondo. Presto (13:37)

"This piece should really have been designated opus 49a, because it is merely a four hand piano arrangement of Kapustin's orchestral Sinfonietta Op. 49 (with the same name). Both versions were composed in 1986, with the piano version serving a purely pragmatic purpose: to be performed at the USSR Ministry of Culture in front of a commission composed of distinguished Soviet composers and musicologists.

'After a performance by me and a female friend of mine, one of the members of the commission remarked that Kapustin created a hybrid of Rossini and Russian folklore. Well, such a hybrid is hardly new: Igor Stravinsky once said that Mikhail Glinka is the "Russian Rossini." Curiously, the original title of this work, "Divertimento," was deemed too frivolous by a Ministry employee who also suggested its present name. At the time I thought that this arrangement was for a one-time use only, but this did not turn out to be the case: first Japanese pianists began to perform it, and then others. Of course, these four pieces could have been arranged in a more inventive (and as a result, more complex) manner. As it is, its texture is quite modest from a pianist's point of view, for obvious reasons. Perhaps it is for the better, since my piano music, as a rule, is technically very difficult (with a few exceptions).

As for the performance, I would like to draw attention to a few things. In the first movement, the secondo part contains multiple chords repeating at a rapid pace which should be played as lightly as possible (leggiero). On the other hand, the first occurrence of the main theme of this movement (which is also in secondo) must be played "a voce piena" (the theme is then picked up by primo). At cue number two of the second movement it is desirable to imitate the sound of a chorus of saxophones and play molto legato in the swing style.'"

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Why this mans work is not on every symphonic orchestra's schedule is beyond me. It's a wonderful mixture of jazz, romantic, classical etc; that has it's own
unique sound

spactick
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if u cant decide between classical and jazz, Kapustin has you covered. Best piece> sonata1

bjornviir
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Kapustin's music puts me in a very happy mood. many thanks for this deeply appreciated post

scuunjieng
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The first movement gives me so much courage and hope for life🥰✌

chungyuetien
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Great composer and fantastic performers!

jourviendra
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This is one of my favorite pieces of music these days

michigandersea
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"Hip" chord changes throughout! RIP

PepperWilliams_songcovers
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Great. Didn't know this one. His music is such a turn on!

MichaelConwayBaker
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One of the best composer and I discovered him just last year

joseleaci
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The ending of the waltz sounds so... Russian. Its gorgeous. To my ears, it hearkens back to the era of Scriabin (his super-chromatic, yet still-romantic middle period) and Rachmaninoff.

MalabarTheGreat
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He was like the Soviet version of George Gershwin.

keyboardtek
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