‘[Naoumoff’s and Yau Cheng’s] ensemble and musicality allow these works to be heard in their best light. The sound is excellent…’ – American Record Guide
‘Burleson proves to be a fine advocate for this music: He balances just the right amount of elegance and grace with the fieriness that this music requires. And he is a virtuoso par excellence, easily handling the numerous difficulties one finds in this music.’ – Fanfare
‘A passionate journey through the work of Claude Debussy, beautifully served by Nicolas Horvath’s rigorous and sensitive interpretation.’
‘Horvath succeeds in the right mix of laconicism, nonchalance and mischievous irony, all with gripping, compact sound and clear contours, always with a feel for the wit in the precious little details.’ – Concerti
A student of Franck, Vincent d’Indy (1851–1931) founded the Schola Cantorum de Paris where he taught for many years. He was also a conductor, with a busy schedule of international touring. His compositions were permeated by the influence of Wagner – he attended the premiere of the Ring cycle – but in time he also absorbed the influence of French folk music, especially from the Vivarais, his ancestral home.
Vincent d’Indy’s large-scale Piano Sonata is one of a small but masterful sequence of non-programmatic instrumental works that he wrote in the first decade of the 20th century. Notable for a novel application of variation form in its opening movement it fuses experimentation with expressive power. Poetic atmospheres and landscapes are evoked in the Tableaux de voyage, postcards of his walks in Germany.
‘Jean-Pierre Armengaud...carefully works the sound, presenting the complex forms with delicacy and lightness.’ – Classica ★★★★★
‘Belgian pianist Eliane Reyes plays with superb feeling for each piece, bringing out their intrinsic qualities, especially their many lyrical moments.’