Composer: Antonín Dvořák, Johannes Brahms, Oğuzhan Balcı
Performer: Gülru Ensari, Herbert Schuch
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Avi Music
Catalogue: AVI8553214
Release: 2022
Size: 571 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
01. Dvořák: Slavonic Dance, Op. 72: No. 1, Molto vivace
02. Brahms: Hungarian Dance, WoO 1: No. 2, Allegro non ssai
03. Brahms: Hungarian Dance, WoO 1: No. 11, Poco Andate
04. Dvořák: Slavonic Dance, Op. 72: No. 2, Allegretto Grazioso
05. Brahms: Hungarian Dance, WoO 1: No. 4, Poco sostenuto
06. Dvořák: Slavonic Dance, Op. 72: No. 5, Poco Adagio
07. Brahms: Hungarian Dance, WoO 1: No. 6, Vivace
08. Brahms: Hungarian Dance, WoO 1: No. 1, Allegro molto
09. Dvořák: Slavonic Dance, Op. 72: No. 7, Presto
Tchaikovsky: Nutcracker Suite, op. 71a (Arr. for Two Pianos by Nicolas Economou)
10. I. Ouverture. Allegro giusto
11. II. Danses charactéristiques: March, Temo di marcia vivo
12. Danse de la Fée Dragée, Andante non troppo
13. Danse Russe Trepak, Tempo di Trepak, molto vivace
14. Danse Arabe, Allegretto
15. Danse Chinoise, Allegro moderato
16. Danse de Mirlitons, Moderato assai
17. III. Valse des Fleurs, Tempo di Valse
18. Sarmal, for Piano Four Hands
Herbert Schuch and Gulru Ensari look back on musical memories of their childhoods.
Although they each spent their childhood in thoroughly different circumstances, Herbert Schuch and Gulru Ensari feel somehow connected through memories of their first musical moments.
Herbert grew up until the age of nine in the Romanian countryside near the Hungarian border, during the bleak last years of communism. Born in Istanbul, Gulru grew up as a city dweller. “We both had a record player at home”, she remarks, to show what they had in common. Now, as a married couple and piano duo, they have found time and leisure during the pandemic to look back on the past. Overjoyed by the birth of their daughter, they shared memories of certain moments from their own childhood that seem to stand still in time.
For this album, “In search of…”, they looked for music they associate with those moments. In so doing, they were also searching for their own identity. Herbert belongs to the minority of the Banat Swabians: “Although there was no direct Hungarian lineage in my family, the language and culture of Hungary played a significant role in our lives. Conversely, although we were in Romania, we practically had no points of contact with Romanian culture”, he remembers. “The pieces we played at home back then would have seemed out of place on this album; in my parents’ home, we exclusively played the Hungarian operetta tunes that were en vogue. My uncle sang, and he was accompanied at the piano by my father, who had brought back LPs from the GDR.” On the other hand, in Istanbul, Gulru was strongly influenced by Western culture. At home, she only heard Classical music: Brahms, Dvorak, Tchaikovsky the composers now featured on this CD. “I grew up with VHS videotapes. I watched Disney’s Sleeping Beauty and Fantasia countless times, with the original music from Tchaikovsky’s ballets”, she remembers. In search for similar memories from childhood, Tchaikovsky was the first common denominator the couple found that they shared. “We both remember having listened to the Nutcracker Suite when we were children”, Herbert remarks.