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Review: MusicWebInternational
Review: ColinsColumn

Ludwig van Beethoven

Piano Sonata No. 31 in A flat Major, Op. 110
1. I. Moderato, cantabile molto espressivo
2. II. Allegro molto
3. III. Recitativo – Arioso dolente – Fugue – Arioso – Fugue

FrƩdƩric Chopin
Piano Sonata No. 3 in B minor, Op. 58
4. I. Allegro maestoso
5. II. Scherzo: Molto vivace
6. III. Largo
7. IV. Finale: Presto, non tanto

Johannes Brahms
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24
8. Theme and Variations 1-8
9. (Variation 9) and Variations 10-17
10. (Variation 18) and Variations 19-25 and Fugue

Music and age Ā©
Why do many musicians continue playing far beyond when other people think they should quit? Maybe they have always played for their own sake, not the audience’s.
If you are fortunate to have experienced the intoxication of playing an instrument while young, you are more likely to become an ā€œaddictā€ forever. A listener can sometimes achieve the same feeling, but the sensation while making music is stronger.
From the ecstatic childhood feeling of joy, you slowly develop a change in consciousness. The two most basic states of consciousness are awake and asleep – but music can take you to a higher level. Where the word stops, music begins. Just as a hypnotist can take a person into a trance with the click of a hand, a sensitive musician can take him or herself to a higher level by striking one or two chords.

RELEASE DATE: JANUARY 2022

CATALOGUE NUMBER: DACOCD 910

EAN: 5709499910009