Sergei Rachmaninov: Préludes op. 32/10 & 32/12,
Etude op. 39/5 · Préludes op. 23/2 & 23/10
Alexander Skriabin: Fantasy op.28 · Prélude for the Left
Hand op. 9/1 · Nocturne for the Left Hand op. 9/2
Nikolai Medtner: Two Fairy Tales op. 20
Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky: “October” & “January”
from “The Seasons” op. 37b
Sergei Prokofiev: Sonata No. 7 op. 83
Benjamin Moser, piano
Benjamin Moser has selected an anthology of Russian
piano music for his CD debut. With this release, he
introduces a piano repertoire chapter that is particularly
dear to his heart as it has accompanied him in
a special way since childhood. The selection of works
by Medtner, Prokofiev, Rachmaninov, Skriabin und
Tchaikovsky mainly offers pieces that are rather seldom
heard yet also a few more popular compositions,
such as four Rachmaninov Préludes plus Prokofiev’s
great Sonata No. 7. Benjamin Moser was born in Munich in 1981. He
started studying piano with Michael Schäfer at the
University of Music and Performing Arts in Munich
and is currently studying with Klaus Hellwig in his
master class at the University of the Arts in Berlin. In
2007, he won the Moscow Tchaikovsky Competition
as well as the Young Concert Artists’ Competition in
New York.
Russian Piano Music
Benjamin Moser writes about the works
on this CD and the overall concept and
feelings that went into their selection:
For years, I have had an intensive preoccupation
with Russian music – my interest began
as far back as my childhood.
All of the composers recorded here are linked
to or have more or less direct relationships with
each other.
For me, the attraction of this compilation
is discovering the commonalities and interrelationships,
but also the individual characteristics
of each work.
The dominant theme here is the extreme
emotional range of the music: love, sorrow,
hope, desperation, longing, joy, tragedy, heroism…
the list is endless.
All of the works on this recording are equally
important to me. Even if virtuosity is an important
aspect, I principally try to use this in service
of the music, never the other way around.
Sergei Rachmaninov (1873–1943):
“In my compositions, I have never consciously
tried to be original, romantic, nationalistic or
anything else. I just write down the music that I
hear in myself, and as naturally as possible.”
This was Sergei Rachmaninov’s reaction
to various accusations that in his opinion
were quite antiquated.
Fundamentally, it was the Prélude in
C-sharp Minor that had instantly made the
19-year-old composer famous. On the other
hand, it simultaneously contributed to misunderstandings
about his music: it was criticized
as too monstrous, too light, too sentimental.
Circa ten years later, he composed the
Préludes op. 32 in less than two weeks. In this
case, Rachmaninov was primarily interested
in forming images in tones. The Prélude in
G-sharp Minor was meant to represent a lonely
winter landscape, above which a melody of
yearning for a far-away homeland seemingly
floats.
The Prélude in B Minor is considered to
be Rachmaninov’s favorite. He summarized
it himself with one word: return.
A fter submerging into a seething kettle of
emotions and passionate tragedy, the Etude
in E-flat Minor op. 39, No. 5 only reaches a
state of deliverance at the very end.

A declaration of love that needs no words
can be heard in the Prélude in G-sharp Major
op. 23, No. 10. This piece is almost antithetical
to op. 23/2, which triumphantly and majestically
closes the Rachmaninov segment of
this recording.
Alexander Skrjabin (1872–1915):
After the successful – but not stunning –
completion of his studies at the Moscow
Conservatory, Alexander Skrjabin found that
if he wanted to succeed as a concert pianist
in a musical world characterized by intense
competitive pressure, he would have to submit
himself to a rigorous training program
of his own devising. Unfortunately, his plan
backfired after a very short time, leaving him
with distressing physical difficulties – which
later led to psychological problems as well.
The pianist and composer thus saw himself
confronted in 1893 by tendonitis in the right
hand. His defiant reaction to his doctors’
opinion that he would never recover from
this condition was to compose two works
exclusively for the left hand.
At this point in time, however, the young
composer of op. 9 could not know that these
compositions would bring him recognition
and prestige as a composer and cause
his breakthrough in America twelve years
later. Although born of desperate need, they
helped Skrjabin overcome his crisis with musical
means and thus radiate hope despite
his melancholy while composing them. The
orchestral texture of the Fantasy in B Minor,
op. 28, composed circa seven years later,
makes it one of Skrjabin’s pianistically most
demanding works.
The main theme in the middle register
is literally ripped apart by octaves moving
counter to each other, reaching the instrument’s
extremes after only four measures.
The secondary theme also uses the entire
range of the instrument in order to form a
“multi-storey organ composition”.
This “sonata without development”, as it
was later called by musicologists, was not premiered
until six years after it was published.
Nikolai Medtner (1880–1951):
“In my opinion, you are one of the greatest composers
of our time,” said Sergei Rachmaninov to
his colleague, the ethnic German-born piano
virtuoso and composer Nikolai Medtner. It
was also Rachmaninov who exerted himself
on behalf of his friend, organizing a concert
tour of America for him, for example. This
tour – in contrast to Medtner’s popularity in
his own country – did not go well, however.
Only later, when he was in exile in England,
did Medtner’s works began to attract
international attention.
“…as though begging someone with smoldering
intensity…” was Nikolai Medtner’s
instruction to his pupils on how to perform
op. 20 No. 1 – this miniature, which despite
its length of barely three minutes resembles
an outpouring of all sorrow and pain in the
world, compressed onto the tip of a needle.
Its counterpart, op. 20, No. 2, on the other
hand, is a virtual explosion. This ominous
episode, Campanella, is meant to be played
without any rubato whatsoever, according to
Medtner. The piece is less the story of a bell,
but is a story of “havoc and terror” told by
the bell’s peals. Despite its pulsating, almost
percussive rhythms and inexorable hardness,
this piece has little in common with the virtuosity
of its time. The musical individualist
Medtner had a lifelong aversion to such
virtuosity – in great part to emphasize his
contempt for contemporary composers like
Stravinsky and Prokofiev.
The later name Fairy Tales fails to show
the origin of the poetic inspiration that
Medtner got from such authors as Pushkin,
Shakespeare and various Russian poets.
One of the composer’s contemporaries
appropriately declared the collection to be
“tales of personal experiences, of the inner
conflicts in the life of a person”.
P. I. Tchaikovsky (1840–1893):
The impulse for Tchaikovsky’s piano
cycle
The Seasons came from Nikolai Bernard,
publisher of the newspaper “The Novelist”.
He commissioned the composer to write
a short musical episode for every month in
the year 1876. The publisher hoped by this to
persuade readers not to miss any issue of the
newspaper.
Every piece was preceded by a verse by a
famous Russian poet that was meant to serve
the listener as a sort of anchor, a fixed point
from which his or her imagination could run
free.
More important than any introductory
word, however, seemed to be the various
moods, which didn’t only point to the
constant changes in nature, but likewise to
humans themselves, and in the manner of a
simile, to the path they took through life.
January: at the fireplace is one of the wintery
daydreams and thus part of the “small
radius of feelings” that would one month
later be contrasted by the turbulence of Carnival.
Tchaikovsky’s October: fall song is likewise
elegiac, but tiredly strives downwards
and with more pain. The bass line hardly has
the energy to separate itself from the tonic,
even when the melody moves harmonically
in dominant regions. The bass lies as though
paralyzed and seems to constantly drag down
the main line – which at first tries to surge
upwards – until it is suspended in the middle
range. Here, however, Tchaikovsky masterfully
gives the line support from a second line
that is shifted by an eighth-note and which
contributes to “saving” the main line through
its own rhythmical individuality.
Sergei Prokofiev (1891–1953):
“That is not art, that is life itself,” countered
poet Vladimir Mayakovsky to all those who
were completely overwhelmed by the almost
ecstatic effect of the music of the young
Prokofiev, titling the composer as a “crazy
man” and his music as “futuristic katzenjammer”.
The composer was no radical, however,
but a curious musician who danced among
all styles and rang in an early harmonic
avant-garde.
This and his interest in oppositions are
very apparent in his Sonata No. 7, composed
during a period of three years. The composition
is directly related to the events of
the time. The scene of the first movement
is World War II. The raging of the music
evokes images of marching soldiers, gunfire
and a hail of bombs as well as the spread of
rage and fear, which the secondary theme
tries to intercept with wistful reminiscence.
The following Andante caloroso seems like
a vague remembrance of quieter days, like a
fairy tale – warm, simple and melancholy, a
short period of calm – before reality breaks
in again in the middle section. Bells peal
over the pictures of human sorrow, the vision
from before comes up once again before
sinking into nothingness.
The final movement resounds with rolling
tanks, relentless and merciless, devastating
everything in their way – the complete
destruction of the world.
Kathrin Feldmann
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler