Ravel & Scriabin: Piano Works Andrew Tyson

Cover Ravel & Scriabin: Piano Works

Album info

Album-Release:
2017

HRA-Release:
20.04.2017

Label: Alpha

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Andrew Tyson

Composer: Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Alexander Scriabin (1872-1915): Piano Sonata No. 3 in F-Sharp Minor, Op. 23:
  • 1 I. Drammatico 06:17
  • 2 II. Allegretto 02:21
  • 3 III. Andante 04:34
  • 4 IV. Presto con fuoco 05:40
  • Maurice Ravel (1875-1937): Miroirs, M. 43:
  • 5 No. 1. Noctuelles 04:47
  • 6 No. 2. Oiseaux tristes 03:27
  • 7 No. 3. Une barque sur l'océan 06:51
  • 8 No. 4. Alborada del gracioso 06:01
  • 9 No. 5. La vallée des cloches 05:49
  • Alexander Scriabin:
  • 10 Piano Sonata No. 10 in C Major, Op. 70 12:52
  • Total Runtime 58:39

Info for Ravel & Scriabin: Piano Works



After his first recording, devoted to Chopin (ZZT347), and the award of First Prize at the Géza Anda Competition in 2015, which gave a substantial boost to his career, the young American pianist Andrew Tyson has devised a new programme to showcase his talents: two sonatas and a waltz by Scriabin coupled with Ravel’s Miroirs.

Andrew Tyson has chosen to associate two composers whose language seems to divide them, but who nevertheless have many things in common, notably their use of tonality, of certain unusual harmonies and of dissonance. Alexander Scriabin and Maurice Ravel also lived in the same city, at the same period, without ever meeting: Debussy, Ravel and the French musical elite of the period regarded their Russian colleagues as crude and uneducated. Yet when one listens to their music, even if their approach to the piano and to composition could hardly be more different, it is apparent that they use tone colours in the same way. For Andrew Tyson, ‘Ravel is an elegant perfectionist, whose every detail is calculated and glitters like crystal; Scriabin is like a flickering flame – passionate, reckless, spontaneous and erotic.’

Andrew Tyson, piano


Andrew Tyson
praised by The New York Times for the “passion and poetry” in his performance, pianist Andrew Tyson is emerging as a distinctive and intriguing musical voice. Since winning the Young Concert Artists International Auditions in 2011, Mr. Tyson has received a 2013 Avery Fisher Career Grant, Sixth Prize at the 2013 Queen Elisabeth International Piano Competition of Belgium, and Fifth Prize and the Terence Judd – Hallé Orchestra Prize at the 2012 Leeds International Piano Competition. The Prize brought three performances of Rachmaninoff’s Concerto No. 2 with the Orchestra in November 2012, leading to engagements in the 2013-2014 season.

This season’s engagements include appearances with the Kansas City Symphony, Colorado Symphony, Chamber Orchestra of the Triangle, the Hilton Head Symphony, and recitals in the St. Stephen’s Concert Series, and at the Falany Performing Arts Center, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, and at the Caramoor Festival. He also tours the UK with the Hallé Orchestra, performing Rachmaninoff’s Paganini Variations in Gateshead, Manchester and Blackburn and Beethoven’s Concerto No. 4 in Leeds.

Mr. Tyson has performed at the Coolidge Auditorium at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC, the National Chopin Foundation in Miami, the Brevard Music Festival, the El Paso Chopin Music Festival, and in New York at the International Keyboard Institute & Festival. Mr. Tyson has performed abroad at the Paul Klee Zentrum in Switzerland, the Filharmonia Narodowa in Poland, the Sintra Festival in Portugal, and the Festival Cultural de Mayo in Guadalajara, Mexico. He has appeared as soloist with orchestras including the National Orchestra of Belgium under Marin Alsop and the Orchestre Royal de Chambre de Wallonie. He has also soloed in his native North Carolina with the Durham Symphony, the Raleigh Symphony and the Chapel Hill Philharmonia.

He made his New York recital debut in the Rhoda Walker Teagle Concert at Merkin Hall and his Washington, DC debut at the Kennedy Center’s Terrace Theater in the Young Concert Artists Series to acclaim. At the YCA Auditions, Mr. Tyson was awarded YCA’s Paul A. Fish Memorial Prize and the John Browning Prize as well as three performance prizes: the Brownville Concert Series, the Lied Center of Kansas, and the Bronder Prize for Piano of Saint Vincent College.

Mr. Tyson made his orchestral debut at the age of 15 as winner of the Eastern Music Festival’s competition to appear with the Guilford Symphony. His early studies were with Dr. Thomas Otten of the University of North Carolina. He graduated from the Curtis Institute of Music where he worked with Claude Frank, earned his Master’s degree at The Juilliard School working with Robert McDonald, and is currently in the Artist Diploma program at The Juilliard School, where he won the Gina Bachauer Piano Competition.

Booklet for Ravel & Scriabin: Piano Works

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