Hélène Grimaud Releases Mozart Concertos 19 and 23, with concert aria, on November 8

The album opens with the Piano Concerto no. 19 in F Major. The rhythmic piece highlights Mozart's incredible range with the militaristic first movement contrasting with the airy gentle second movement. The last movement of the work has been called among Mozart's best. Grimaud writes that this exhilarating section is, "Very virtuosic, alive and effervescent. But this manic energy is almost an escape into a trance: it is not only joy, it is not only happiness." The disc continues with the aria Ch’io mi scordi di te? – Non temer, amato bene, which Grimaud calls, "Gorgeous. It’s like liquid gold, the piano’s interventions going from something to do with silk to something to do with lace." The disc concludes with Piano Concerto no. 23 in A Major, a piece with vocal coloring and operatic tone. Grimaud considers the concerto in A major, "Probably the most sublime concerto Mozart ever wrote," with a slow movement that is "an extremely deep and painful expression of longing, where you find the real Mozart."
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