This could do equally well in the What are you listening to now thread, but on balance it belongs better here, since hearing it this afternoon was a revelatory experience. It's a work which is in my collection, but on a disc which I bought for the coupling, and I either didn't listen to it or it didn't make an impression on me before.
What is it? It's Louis Vierne's Piano Quintet op. 42, a quite astonishing work!
The obvious reaction is 'What? Chamber music by Vierne? Didn't he only write for organ?', which just goes to show how dangerous it can be to pigeon-hole composers. This is an assured work from beginning to end, written at fever pace in response to yet another cruel slap from Fate. Vierne's handling of the instruments is masterly, with the piano much more primus inter pares than it is in so many other quintets, but the abiding impression is of music of an ostensibly programmatic nature lifting itself above that and establishing itself in its own right as a masterpiece.
I know I risk falling into the comparison trap, but I couldn't help thinking of Suk's magnificent Asrael symphony (afterwards, I hasten to add — comparisons were the last thing in my mind while listening to the Vierne).
What is it? It's Louis Vierne's Piano Quintet op. 42, a quite astonishing work!
The obvious reaction is 'What? Chamber music by Vierne? Didn't he only write for organ?', which just goes to show how dangerous it can be to pigeon-hole composers. This is an assured work from beginning to end, written at fever pace in response to yet another cruel slap from Fate. Vierne's handling of the instruments is masterly, with the piano much more primus inter pares than it is in so many other quintets, but the abiding impression is of music of an ostensibly programmatic nature lifting itself above that and establishing itself in its own right as a masterpiece.
I know I risk falling into the comparison trap, but I couldn't help thinking of Suk's magnificent Asrael symphony (afterwards, I hasten to add — comparisons were the last thing in my mind while listening to the Vierne).
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