Valentin Silvestrov emerges from the late Soviet classical tradition as a figure of quiet resistance, not through overt polemic but by turning inward when history demanded proclamations. While many composers of his generation negotiated the pressures of socialist realism or the rigor of the avant-garde, Silvestrov gradually chose another path, treating music as an echo rather than a declaration. But he carried it further, dissolving form until what remained was remembrance itself. In his hands, composition became a kind of afterlife, where melody appears already worn by time, as if it remembers having been heard before. Handsome Skies, as realized
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CDs, Interviews, Piano, Review
In a sea of pianists sailing toward contemporary shores, the vessel of Alessandro Stella stands out for its hydrodynamic contours. Stella has performed widely across Europe—more recently, in South America—and was central, among other projects, in reviving Giacinto Scelsi’s early chamber works under auspices of the Isabella Scelsi Foundation. On Midwinter Spring, his first recital disc for Italy’s KHA Records, he presents works by Giya Kancheli, Arvo Pärt, and Pēteris Vasks. Even without the program in hand, one can already feel the possibilities for continuity and artful contrast between these composers. All three have gained worldwide notoriety for larger-scale symphonies,
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