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The Muse
Johannes Brahms - Clara Wieck Schumann

The Muse

Nino Gvetadze

Label: Challenge Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 0608917297027
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Catalog number: CC 72970
Releasedate: 03-11-23

- We are proud to present the fifth disc by Nino Gvetadze on Challenge Classics

- After Chopin, Scott, Schumann and Beethoven, we get to Brahms

- Nino has selected three masterpieces from three different periods of Brahms’s life

- Schumann’s disc (CC 72855): BBC Music Magazine: “This is, quite simply, gorgeous.” Gramophone: ”Gvetadze’s sensitivity to Schumann’s vaunted ‘inner voices’ is unsurpassed”

The year 1860 represented a turning-point in Brahms’s life: he issued a ‘Manifesto’ in which he distanced himself from the Romanticism of the ‘New German School’ epitomised by Liszt and their association with Wagner’s music-dramas. This aesthetic change of heart placed an emphasis on hard work and craftsmanship rather than the more Romantic conception of inspiration, with Brahms taking a particular pride in being both German and a self-made man. This ethos is reflected in the Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel, Op. 24. Brahms’s two Rhapsodies, Op. 79 were composed in 1879 and were dedicated to his friend Elisabet von Herzogenberg. The title may lull the listener into a false sense of whimsy, when in reality these pieces are founded on clear structural designs. Three Intermezzos Op. 117: Brahms wrote of these three Intermezzos to his friend Rudolf von der Leyen, describing them as ‘Wiegenlieder meiner Schmerzen’: ‘lullabies of my sorrow’. Each has the character of a soliloquy or introspective personal reflection.

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Nino Gvetadze about this album: "Throughout his life, Brahms was influenced by those he admired: the musicians he idolized, and the women with whom he formed powerful bonds. Clara Schumann represented both, and Nino Gvetadze explores their fascinating dynamic in The Muse. Brahms’s Two Rhapsodies Op. 79 were dedicated to Elisabet von Herzogenberg, whose loss he mourned in the Intermezzos Op. 117; and he was inspired by Handel to write a phenomenal set of Variations dedicated to Clara Schumann – whose Op. 21 Romances date from a time that neither she nor Brahms would ever forget."