0608917200461

Echoes In The Mists (Schubert; Liszt; Schumann; Janacek)

Tae-Hyung Kim

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Format: CD

Cat No: CC720046

PRE-ORDER: This item will be shipped with the aim to deliver on release day.

Release Date:  06 March 2026

Label:  Challenge Classics

Packaging Type:  Jewel Case

No of Units:  1

Barcode:  0608917200461

Genres:  Classical  Solo Instrumental  

Composer/Series:  Echoes in the Mists (Schubert; Liszt; Schumann; Janacek)

  • Description

    Tae-Hyung Kim's Echoes in the Mists is a poetic journey through a century of piano music, tracing a line from early Romanticism to early modernism. The album opens with Franz Liszt's masterful transcriptions of Schubert's Lieder--works that preserve the songs' lyrical intimacy while expanding their expressive possibilities on the piano. These include Fruhlingsglaube, Standchen von Shakespeare, and excerpts from Die schone Mullerin, where Liszt illuminates Schubert's emotional worlds with subtle pianistic colour and occasional virtuosic flourish. At the heart of the programme lies Robert Schumann's Waldszenen, a deeply introspective cycle in which nine miniature scenes form an imaginative, poetic walk through an inner forest--alternating between joy, mystery, tenderness, and melancholy. Through this selection, Kim highlights the richly interconnected sound worlds of Schubert, Schumann, and Liszt, revealing both continuity and evolution within the Romantic tradition. The album's second half turns toward a different aesthetic with Leos Janacek's V mlhach (In the Mists), written in 1912, a work shaped by personal grief and the composer's late-style search for distilled expression. Its four movements form a single, mist-shrouded psychological landscape, where fragmentary motives, speech-like rhythms, and shifting tonal colours create a fragile, introspective atmosphere. While faint traces of Debussy's influence may be heard--particularly in the luminous openings and closings--the music remains unmistakably Janacek's in its tension, fatalism, and emotional immediacy. By juxtaposing these radically different composers, Kim creates an album that reflects the transformation of piano writing from Romantic lyricism to early modern expression, inviting listeners to hear how echoes of the past resonate through changing musical languages.