PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Matthew Bengtson, 215-704-4600;
www.mattbengtson.com
Publicist, Trish Doll, Publicity Works, 717-445-6377
Bengtson's ‘B!’ CD brings together the piano music of Bach, Bartok and Brahms
One ‘B’ is out. The other is in, representing the performer's interest in 20th century music
Philadelphia, PA - (September, 2004) - Bach meets Bartók meets Brahms on a new compact disc
of piano music entitled ‘B!’ and recorded by pianist Matthew Bengtson. A concert pianist
who has appeared on many of the world’s stages, Bengtson recorded the works of these particular
Three B’s to represent the baroque, contemporary and romantic periods of music.
The expression “Three Bs” was coined by another distinguished pianist and composer, Hans von Bülow,
who was referring to the three musical giants of history: Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. Bartók later came to
be known as the “Fourth B” and was chosen instead of Ludwig von Beethoven for this recording to reflect
Bengtson’s interest in twentieth-century music.
The CD begins with J.S. Bach’s lively and spirited Partita no. 5 in G major. A favorite among
pianists and audiences alike, the Partita comes alive with refreshing energy, beginning with the Praeambulum
and concluding with the Gigue, an exhilarating contrapuntal maze whose lines intertwine throughout in
clear relief, under Bengtson’s hands. The delightful seven-movement suite incorporates so many of the
baroque elements that Bach listeners have come to know and love. Bengtson’s clarity of articulation and
imaginative ornamentation are clearly informed by his study of the harpsichord.
Following the Partita and in stark contrast is the powerful, sometimes eerie music found in Bela Bartók’s
Out of Doors Suite. As Bengtson’s liner notes suggest, this music reveals and confirms the
composer’s close kinship to folk music and his sense of the picturesque.
The recording ends with Johannes Brahms’s Four Ballades, op. 10. Brahms was only 21 when he
wrote the ballads, but such a work by this master even at a young age requires considerable maturity from a
performer. Full of passion, drama and lyrical beauty, Brahms’s Ballades characterize the period
of German Romanticism when it was in full flower.
‘B!’ is a little over an hour long, and all selections were recorded as if they were being offered
in live performance. Bengtson used this unedited approach to achieve “organic coherence over technical
perfection.” The recording sessions took place at Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, MD, and West Chester
University in West Chester, PA. ‘B!’ follows Bengtson’s 2002 recording of Karol Szymanowski’s
22 piano mazurkas. For his efforts in researching Szymanowski’s mazurkas, Bengtson was awarded recently one
of the Stefan & Wanda Wilk Prizes for Research in Polish Music.
He is currently working on soon-to-be-released CD recording of Six Sonatas by Scriabin.
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