POLISH PIANIST KAROL SZRETER (1898-1933) VOL. 3 CDR

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KAROL SZRETER (LODZ, POLAND, 29 SEPTEMBER, 1898 – BERLIN, GERMANY, MARCH 20, 1933)         He started out a child prodigy, making his first public appearance in his native Poland at about the age of 9. At age 13 he was awarded a scholarship to study piano at the St. Petersburg Conservatoire and…

Description

KAROL SZRETER (LODZ, POLAND, 29 SEPTEMBER, 1898 – BERLIN, GERMANY, MARCH 20, 1933)

 

 

 

 

He started out a child prodigy, making his first public appearance in his native Poland at about the age of 9. At age 13 he was awarded a scholarship to study piano at the St. Petersburg Conservatoire and he remained there until the outbreak of World War I. Afterwards Szreter completed his studies in Berlin with the great Egon Petri. While a meeting between Szreter and Petri’s mentor Ferruccio Busoni has not been established as a matter of fact, it is more than likely that there was contact somewhere along the line, and Szreter’s recorded performances bear certain recognizable pianistic traits that are held in common within the “Busoni Circle.” At war’s end Szreter began his career in earnest with a series of successful concerts given in Central and Eastern Europe. Szreter recorded prolifically, beginning with acoustic records made for the German Vox label in the early 1920s. Around 1925 Szreter struck up a relationship with the German branch of the Parlophone label, and this firm would continue to engage Szreter’s talents for the rest of his days. Parlophone is a pop label, and the vast majority of Szreter’s many recordings would consist of popular melodies, usually backed by an orchestra. However, the upside of this arrangement was that on occasion Szreter was provided far more latitude to record serious literature than was allowed most of his contemporaries, even in comparison to labels more keenly focused on classical repertoire. In 1926, Szreter made the first electrical recording of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4, and by 1930 had recorded three of Beethoven’s sonatas and a complete Schumann Carnaval, Op. 9. In 1930 Szreter made his first concert appearances in Britain, where his recordings had been well-received by both public and critics alike, and his concert tour was to be no disappointment. “Szreter’s sense of tone gradation is of the subtlest,” exclaimed a writer in the Daily Telegraph, “his rhythms as unfailing as his control of climaxes.” In 1933 Parlophone planned to make Szreter the linchpin of a series of recordings of Brahms’ chamber works in honor of the composer’s centenary. But this series was barely underway when Szreter lost his lifelong battle with leukemia at the age of about 34.

 

 

TRACKLIST

 

 

Carnaval, Op.9 (Schumann)

Carnaval – 1) Préambule 2) Pierrot 3) Arlequin 4) Valse noble E11180 P 67005-I

Carnaval – 5) Eusebius 6) Florestan 7) Coquette 8) Replique E11180 P 67005-II

Carnaval – 9) Papillons 10) A.S.C.H. – S.C.H.A. (Lettres dansantes) 11) Chiarina 12) Chopin E11181 P 67006-I

Carnaval – 13) Estrella 14) Reconnaissance 15) Pantalon et Colombine 16) Valse Allemande 17) Paganini E11181 P 67006-II

Carnaval – 18) Aveu 19) Promenade E11182 P 67007-I

Carnaval -20) Pause 21) Marche des Davidbündler contre les Philistines E11182 P 67007-II

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