Composer: Frédéric François Chopin
Performer: Peter Jablonski
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Ondine
Catalogue: ODE 1412-2
Release: 2022
Size: 1.19 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
4 Mazurkas, Op. 6, B. 60
01. No. 1 in F-Sharp Minor
02. No. 2 in C-Sharp Minor
03. No. 3 in E Major
04. No. 4 in E-Flat Minor
5 Mazurkas, Op. 7, B. 61
05. No. 5 in B-Flat Major
06. No. 6 in A Minor
07. No. 7 in F Minor
08. No. 8 in A-Flat Major
09. No. 9 in C Major
4 Mazurkas, Op. 17, B. 77
10. No. 10 in B-Flat Major
11. No. 11 in E Minor
12. No. 12 in A-Flat Major
13. No. 13 in A Minor
4 Mazurkas, Op. 24, B. 89
14. No. 14 in G Minor
15. No. 15 in C Major
16. No. 16 in A-Flat Major
17. No. 17 in B-Flat Minor
4 Mazurkas, Op. 30, B. 105
18. No. 18 in C Minor
19. No. 19 in B Minor
20. No. 20 in D-Flat Major
21. No. 21 in C-Sharp Minor
4 Mazurkas, Op. 33, B. 115
22. No. 22 in G-Sharp Minor
23. No. 23 in D Major
24. No. 24 in C Major
25. No. 25 in B Minor
4 Mazurkas, Op. 41
26. No. 26 in E Minor
27. No. 27 in B Major
28. No. 28 in A-Flat Major
29. No. 29 in C-Sharp Minor
Swedish pianist Peter Jablonski is known as a fervent champion of Polish music. In this album Jablonski returns to some of his dearest piano music – Chopin’s Mazurkas. For Chopin, the Mazurkas became a deeply personal, intimate statement of his feelings as an émigré Polish composer living in Paris. From some of his very first compositions to his last, it is the only form that Chopin composed regularly throughout his life. Similarly, Chopin’s Mazurkas have followed Peter Jablonski throughout his entire career as a pianist in nearly every solo recital.
This album includes Chopin’s first 29 numbered Mazurkas mainly written between 1830 and 1839. Chopin himself assembled mazurkas in opuses meant for publication, with a dramaturgical concept that emerges clearly already from Op. 17, undergoes development in Op. 24, and reaches its peak in Op. 41, often considered to be the most cohesive set of all.
Chopin balances moods and tempi relationships between the pieces in each set more and more carefully. Interestingly, Chopin almost never used authentic folk material, but created folk-like themes of his own. Chopin gave very clear indications in his scores, but never played his own works in the same way twice. He told his students to put their soul into the music they were playing, to trust their own musical intuition. To him, it was important to find the essence of the work, to allow it to live and breathe. The Mazurkas demand elegance, spirit, careful attention to tempi, colours, rubato (the elusive mazurka lilt), dynamics, and pedalling. In his Mazurkas Chopin found a way to be at his most personal, vulnerable, and intimate. One might say that they are his musical diary.