Description
Vision
Pianist Michael Schoch presents a distinguished tribute to Louis Vierne's legacy, inviting listeners into a world of elegance, introspection, and timeless beauty. With captivating musicality, Schoch unveils hiddens dimensions of Vierne, long overshadowed by his celebrated organ music. These pieces emerge here as intimate, richly coloured miniatures of late Romantic expression, presenting a composer of striking imagination and rare artistic depth.
Origins
The programme's early works already display Vierne's remarkable sensitivity to pianistic colour and atmosphere. The Suite bourguignonne paints a poetic rural day in vivid tableaux, from luminous morning serenity to the shimmering stillness of "Clair de lune." These pieces reveal a composer who transforms simplicity into evocative musical storytelling.
Resonance
Echoes of Claude Debussy emerge in the Trois Nocturnes, where impressionistic textures and harmonic nuance shape nocturnal visions of rare beauty. Inspired by the vast interior of Saint-Ouen Abbey Church, the first nocturne evokes monumental grandeur, while the third captures a star-lit stillness enlivened by birdsong. Vierne's voice remains distinct--introspective, architectural, and deeply expressive.
Artistry
Michael Schoch interprets this repertoire with radiant clarity and stylistic authority, uniting virtuosity with poetic restraint. Alongside the major cycles, he brings equal care to the smaller, often posthumous works, revealing their understated charm. The historic Steinway Concert Grand Piano D (1901) "Manfred Burki" lends an authentic tonal palette, perfectly attuned to Vierne's world.