Reynaldo Hahn: Piano Quintet, Songs, Piano Quartet Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective

Cover Reynaldo Hahn: Piano Quintet, Songs, Piano Quartet

Album info

Album-Release:
2025

HRA-Release:
31.01.2025

Label: Chandos

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Vocal

Artist: Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective

Composer: Reynaldo Hahn (1875-1947)

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • Reynaldo Hahn (1874 - 1947): À Chloris (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster):
  • 1 Hahn: À Chloris (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster) 03:22
  • Quand je fus pris au pavillon (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster):
  • 2 Hahn: Quand je fus pris au pavillon (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster) 01:14
  • Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor: I. Molto agitato e con fuoco
  • 3 Hahn: Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor: I. Molto agitato e con fuoco 12:13
  • 4 Hahn: Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor: II. Andante (non troppo lento) 09:22
  • 5 Hahn: Piano Quintet in F-Sharp Minor: III. Allegretto grazioso 07:07
  • Le Rossignol des lilas (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster):
  • 6 Hahn: Le Rossignol des lilas (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster) 02:24
  • Chanson d’automne (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster):
  • 7 Hahn: Chanson d’automne (arranged for Tenor & String Quartet by Tom Poster) 01:44
  • L’Énamourée (arranged for Tenor & Piano Quinet by Tom Poster):
  • 8 Hahn: L’Énamourée (arranged for Tenor & Piano Quinet by Tom Poster) 03:46
  • Quartet in G Major for Violin, Viola, Cello & Piano:
  • 9 Hahn: Quartet in G Major for Violin, Viola, Cello & Piano: I. Allegretto moderato 07:54
  • 10 Hahn: Quartet in G Major for Violin, Viola, Cello & Piano: II. [Sérénade.] Allegro assai 02:20
  • 11 Hahn: Quartet in G Major for Violin, Viola, Cello & Piano: III. Andante 09:16
  • 12 Hahn: Quartet in G Major for Violin, Viola, Cello & Piano: IV. Allegro assai 05:21
  • La Barcheta (arranged for Tenor & Piano Quinet by Tom Poster):
  • 13 Hahn: La Barcheta (arranged for Tenor & Piano Quinet by Tom Poster) 03:43
  • Total Runtime 01:09:46

Info for Reynaldo Hahn: Piano Quintet, Songs, Piano Quartet



Praised by BBC Music magazine for his ‘lucid, velvety tenor and pop-star charisma’, the Lebanese-American Karim Sulayman has garnered international attention as a sophisticated and versatile artist. He joins the Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective for this album of works by Reynaldo Hahn. The founder members Tom Poster and Elena Urioste write: ‘Kaleidoscope has championed many unjustly neglected composers, but in the case of Reynaldo Hahn the neglect seems particularly puzzling to us. is music is immediately approachable, soaringly beautiful, and speaks directly to the heart; audiences, on the rare occasions that they get to hear it, seem to adore it. His life story is fascinating, too: born in Caracas, to a Jewish-German father and a Catholic- Venezuelan mother of Spanish / Basque origin, the handsome and urbane Hahn charmed high-society Paris, enjoying great success as composer, conductor, singer, writer-lecturer, and music critic. The Piano Quintet had been on our programming wish list for some time: it was lauded as Hahn’s greatest work at its 1922 première, and the powerful intensity of its first two movements in particular acts as a firm rejoinder to those who criticised Hahn as a lightweight salon composer. By the time he finished his Piano Quartet, in 1946, Hahn was a man out of place in the world; this is music which bears no trace of modernism, instead looking back nostalgically to Hahn’s heyday in la belle époque.

A number of years ago, our dear friend Karim Sulayman joined Tom in several performances of a set of Hahn songs, and a shared love for the music led to a discussion about how beautifully some of the piano parts could work in chamber arrangements. Karim had first discovered Hahn through the touching recordings on which the composer simultaneously sings and plays his own songs; and we, in turn, have always been deeply touched by the direct channel which Karim seems to have to Hahn’s heartfelt expressive world. For all of us, it has been a profound joy to put these new song arrangements down on disc for the first time'.

Karim Sulayman, tenor
Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective



Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective
is a flexible ensemble of wonderful, joyful, kind, passionate musicians who can’t wait to share chamber music with you.

Like many musicians, we spend a lot of time worrying about the world - about inequality, prejudice, violence, bullying, divisive rhetoric. Chamber music has an extraordinary power to bring people together: it unites musicians as equals, and draws listeners in to its intimate, transportive world.

We love to devise creative and innovative programmes, to curate multi-concert series and residencies, and to showcase great music both familiar and lesser-known. Our diverse and brilliant team hopes also to be able to inspire and educate audiences of all generations in the joys of chamber music, and ultimately to bring a bit of happiness and unity to our currently rather fractured-seeming world.

Karim Sulayman
Lebanese-American tenor Karim Sulayman has garnered international attention as a sophisticated and versatile artist, praised for his “lucid, velvety tenor and pop-star charisma” (BBC Music Magazine). The 2019 Best Classical Solo Vocal GRAMMY® Award winner, he continues to earn acclaim for his original and innovative programming and recording projects, while regularly performing on the world’s stages in opera, orchestral concerts, recital and chamber music.

Recently Mr. Sulayman was presented by Carnegie Hall for a sold out solo recital debut followed immediately by the world premiere of his own multidisciplinary production, Unholy Wars, a baroque pasticcio centered around the Crusades and the Middle East, at Spoleto Festival USA. He’s also made recent debuts at Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie, Stockholm’s Drottningholms Slottsteater, Houston Grand Opera, Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, and the Chicago, National and Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestras. He debuted at Wigmore Hall in concerts of French chamber music with his frequent collaborators, the Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective, which The Arts Desk named to its “Best Performances of 2022.”

Last season saw performances of his acclaimed program with guitarist Sean Shibe, Broken Branches, at Ravinia Festival, Schleswig-Holstein Festival, CAP-UCLA, Boston Celebrity Series and the Phillips Collection, and debuts at Opera Philadelphia (Unholy Wars) and New World Symphony (Britten’s Nocturne). He made his role debut as Grimoaldo in Handel’s Rodelinda (Hudson Hall), created the role of Crow in the world premiere of Layale Chaker/Lisa Schlesinger’s Ruinous Gods (Spoleto Festival USA), and debuted at the Royal Opera House, reprising the title role of Sarah Angliss/Ross Sutherland’s Giant, a role he created the previous year for the Aldeburgh Festival. This season and future engagements include the protagonist in the world premiere of David T. Little’s highly anticipated monodrama What Belongs to You (based on Garth Greenwell’s acclaimed novel), written for Sulayman and Alarm Will Sound and directed by Mark Morris, his role debut as Pelléas in Debussy’s Pelléas et Mélisande, a reprisal of his celebrated portrayal of Monteverdi’s L’Orfeo, and concerts at Park Avenue Armory, Wigmore Hall and Hong Kong’s Premiere Performances.

A dedicated chamber musician, Sulayman was a frequent participant at the Marlboro Music Festival in collaboration with co-directors and pianists Mitsuko Uchida and Richard Goode.. He has since been presented by many of the world’s leading chamber music festivals, collaborating frequently with groups like Eighth Blackbird and as a core member of the Kaleidoscope Chamber Collective. His concerts and recordings have been broadcast nationally and internationally on NPR, American Public Media, BBC Radio 3 and WDR 3.

Mr. Sulayman’s thought provoking and innovative programming is highlighted in his growing discography. He won the 2019 GRAMMY® Award for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album for his debut solo album, Songs of Orpheus (Avie Records), his original program of early Italian Baroque songs and arias. His second solo album, Where Only Stars Can Hear Us (Avie Records), an album of Schubert Lieder with fortepianist Yi-heng Yang was released in 2020 and debuted at #1 on the Billboard Traditional Classical Chart and has received widespread critical acclaim, including being named as “Critic’s Choice” by Opera News, and included on the New York Times’ “Best Classical Music of 2020.” His third album, Broken Branches (Pentatone) with Sean Shibe, debuted at #1 on the UK Classical Chart, and was named one of the Best Classical Music Albums of 2023 by the New York Times, Editor’s Choice by Gramophone Magazine, and was nominated for the 2024 GRAMMY® Award for Best Classical Solo Vocal album.

In November 2016, Karim created a social experiment/performance art piece called I Trust You, designed to build bridges in a divided political climate. A video version of this experiment went “viral” on the internet, and was honored as a prize winner in the My Hero Film Festival. He has been invited to give talks and hold open forums with student and adult groups about inclusion, empathy, healing from racism, and activism through the arts.

In other visual media, he is featured in the ARTE documentary Leonard Bernstein – A Genius Divided, which premiered throughout Europe in the summer of 2018 and was subsequently released on DVD. His performance of Bernstein’s Mass with the CSO was broadcast on PBS Great Performances in the spring of 2020, and in the fall of 2020 Karim appeared on the second season of the acclaimed series Dickinson on Apple TV+.

A native of Chicago, Karim’s musical education began with violin studies at age 3 which he continued through high school. He also spent years as a boy alto the Chicago Children’s Choir and was hand selected by Sir Georg Solti and Leonard Slatkin as a soloist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and the St. Louis Symphony. He graduated with highest honors from the Eastman School of Music where he worked in the Collegium Musicum under the tutelage of Paul O’Dette, and earned a Masters degree from Rice University. He later moved to Paris, France where he studied with renowned tenor/haute-contre, Howard Crook. He also studied improvisation at the Second City Training Center in Chicago.

Karim is passionate about his place in the Arts industry as someone who challenges audiences to think outside the box in a quest to maintain classical music’s relevance in a modern world, smashing the practice of treating old works as museum pieces. He enjoys educating the next generation of music students, encouraging them to think in this way while helping them cultivate their own unique voices. He hopes to make positive changes through thoughtful performance, arts advocacy and social justice that will impact generations to come.

Booklet for Reynaldo Hahn: Piano Quintet, Songs, Piano Quartet

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