Cécile Chaminade and Her Contemporaries Play Chaminade
Cécile Chaminade, Lilian Bryant, Una Bourne, William Murdoch, Rudolph Ganz, Gertrude Meller, Marie Novello, Max Darewski, Maurice Cole, Hans Barth, Mark Hambourg, Shura Cherkassky (piano)
Despite the swishing and hissing, her restlessly propulsive playing of Air de Ballet brings it to life. It's a relief to encounter a fuller piano sound in the later recordings, Mark Hambourg’s...
Cécile Chaminade and Her Contemporaries Play Chaminade
Cécile Chaminade, Lilian Bryant, Una Bourne, William Murdoch, Rudolph Ganz, Gertrude Meller, Marie Novello, Max Darewski, Maurice Cole, Hans Barth, Mark Hambourg, Shura Cherkassky (piano)
Purchase product
Despite the swishing and hissing, her restlessly propulsive playing of Air de Ballet brings it to life. It's a relief to encounter a fuller piano sound in the later recordings, Mark Hambourg’s...
About
The recent ‘discovery’ of the music of Cecile Chaminade (1857-1944) belies the fact that in the early years of the 20th century she was immensely popular, touring both Europe and the US as a pianist, exclusively in her own music. Changing fashions brought an abrupt end to this fame, but in the first thirty years of the recording industry, over 80 discs of her piano music alone were released. Her own discs from 1901, presented complete here, are some of the earliest by a classical pianist. Many of her most popular pieces were recorded multiple times, but this set presents chronologically at least one version of every work recorded on 78s and introduces as many different pianists as practical.
Contents and tracklist
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Cécile Chaminade
- Lilian Bryant
Awards and reviews
April 2025
Despite the swishing and hissing, her restlessly propulsive playing of Air de Ballet brings it to life. It's a relief to encounter a fuller piano sound in the later recordings, Mark Hambourg’s powerfully projected Autumn, and f inally Shura Cherkassky in 1950. A window onto another world.