Composer: Dora Pejačević
Performer: Ekaterina Litvintseva
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Piano Classics
Catalogue: PCL10226
Release: 2021
Size: 1.01 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
6 Fantasy Pieces
01. I. Longing
02. II. Grief
03. III. Question
04. IV. Lament
05. V. Plea
06. VI. Delusion
The Life of Flowers
07. I. Snowdrops
08. II. Violets
09. III. Lilies of the Valley
10. IV. Forget-Me-Not
11. V. Rose
12. VI. Red Carnations
13. VII. Lilies
14. VIII. Chrysanthemums
Caprice Waltzes, Op. 28
15. I. Moderato
16. II. Grazioso
17. III. Im Ländler-Tempo
18. IV. Wiegend
19. V. Lento
20. VI. Tempo Giusto
21. VII. Allegretto
22. VIII. Grazioso
23. IX. Moderato
2 Piano Sketches
24. I. To You!
25. II. Before Your Picture
26. Capriccio, Op. 47
2 Nocturnes
27. I. Sehr Ruhig
28. II. Leicht Bewegt
29. Piano Sonata No. 2
When the Siberian-born pianist Ekaterina Litvintseva heard Blumenleben for the first time, she immediately resolved to find out more about the life and music of Dora Pejačević (1885-1923). This resolution prompted her to investigate an extraordinary corpus of music, remarkable not least for its sheer diversity, which she has attempted to convey in this selection of Pejačević’s piano output. Among 57 extant works, 24 are scored for solo piano; there would surely have been many more in both categories had she not died of kidney failure on 5 March 1923, aged 37, having suffered complications in giving birth to her first child.
Pejačević was born in Budapest in 1885 into the Croatian aristocracy. She grew up on the family estate of Našice (in the region of Slavonia in Croatia) before taking her musical studies more seriously in Zagreb. Her early output shows how well she had mastered the Romantic idiom of character pieces by Mendelssohn, Schumann and Grieg, but her voice begins to emerge in the Six Fantasiestücke, Op. 17 of 1903. From two years later, the Blumenleben bring the character of each chosen the innocent snowdrop, the erotic rose, the mournful chrysanthemum – with a refined melodic imagination and rare economy of thought: her Mendelssohnian sympathies lead her only to use as many notes as are needed.
Even more succinct (none longer than two minutes) are the nine Waltz-Caprices, Op. 28 (1906), ranging in expression from the grace and charm of their heritage to a sideways and even grotesque view of the genre (such as the slower No. 3, “in the tempo of a Ländler”). A more sardonic vein of expression emerges in the Capriccio, Op. 47 (1919), which jumps about the keyboard with dazzling glissandi and diabolical shifts of mood which belong to their time no less than French keyboard innovators such as Debussy and Ravel. The album’s final piece is also the most substantial: the second of Pejačević’s two piano sonatas, which became her penultimate work in any genre. The Sonata’s expressive key signature is established from the outset by the marking of Allegro con fuoco, and the writing is cast on a much grander scale than anything else here, resembling a work in the German or Russian schools more than the French-tinged colours of the miniatures.
This newly recorded recital should attract the attention of pianophiles everywhere. © Piano Classics