ELGAR’S REVELATORY PIANO TRANSCRIPTION OF THE ‘ENIGMA VARIATIONS’
in a new album with
RARE CHAMBER WORKS BY BRITISH 20TH-CENTURY COMPOSERS
ENIGMAS: Solo piano and chamber works
by Elgar, Leighton, Rubbra, Bowen and Sackman
Performed by acclaimed young artists:
ELSPETH WYLLIE piano
solo and chamber recitalist, appearances at the Purcell Room, Fairfield Halls, and for BBC Radio Scotland
CLAIRE OVERBURY flute
guest player with Britten Sinfonia, the RPO, and the Hallé Orchestra
HETTI PRICE cello
appearances at the Southbank Centre and on BBC Radio 3 In Tune
ALEXA BEATTIE viola
guest player with Munich Chamber Orchestra, ensemble appearances with Lisa Batiashvili and Kim Kashkashian
CATHERINE BACKHOUSE mezzo-soprano
Britten Pears Young Artist 2015, solo appearances with Scottish Chamber Orchestra and Garsington Opera
To coincide with Elgar’s 160th birthday on 2nd of June 2017, Divine Art is releasing a recital recording of solo piano and chamber works, featuring Elgar’s own solo piano transcription of his much-loved Enigma Variations. Elgar originally extemporised and sketched out the music at the piano, and his transcription highlights the intimate nature of a work inspired by friends and acquaintances.
This is complemented by a varied collection of masterful repertoire by British composers. Edwin York Bowen’s Sonata for flute and piano is well-known to flautists and Kenneth Leighton’s Elegy is familiar to many cellists – both works deserve to be more widely-known as staples of post-romantic concert repertoire. Edmund Rubbra’s Two Sonnets by William Alabaster for trio are exquisite, essential listening, and this is the first modern-day recording with a mezzo – as Rubbra intended. Finally, a premiere recording of Nicholas Sackman’s Folio I for solo piano, a lively suite originally written for his family.
Recording release date: 19 May 2017
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO A SAMPLE TRACK
LIST OF WORKS:
EDWARD ELGAR – Enigma Variations, Op.36 (composer’s own piano transcription)
KENNETH LEIGHTON – Elegy for cello and piano
EDWIN YORK BOWEN – Sonata for Flute and Piano, Op. 120
NICHOLAS SACKMAN – Folio I for solo piano *premiere recording*
EDMUND RUBBRA – Two Sonnets by William Alabaster for medium voice, viola and piano Op.87
ENIGMAS Solo piano and chamber works (Divine Art catalogue no. DDA 25145)
CDs available to pre-order: www.elspethwyllie.co.uk/enigmas-cd/
Digital format available 19 May: www.divineartrecords.com
For further information please contact:
Kathryn Marshall (Divine Art) – Kathryn@divineartrecords.com
Elspeth Wyllie (performer) – 07878 411300


New Orleans born Louis Moreau Gottschalk (1829-1869) was one of the most astonishing keyboard virtuosos in 19th-century America. But he was much more than that. He was America’s first important pianist-composer. He was an extraordinary traveler, bringing his virtuosity to Europe, to Central and South America and to the Caribbean, where he lived in Cuba for extended periods. As a composer, his unique style combined his Creole musical heritage with the American, Latin American and Afro-Caribbean influences he absorbed during his travels – all expressed within the boundaries of classical piano writing prevalent in the 19th century. Gottschalk made friends wherever he traveled and these far-reaching connections are the subject of Cuban pianist Antonio Itturioz‘s new project Gottschalk and Cuba, a CD containing a
world premiere recording of the entire Nuit des Tropiques, Symphony Romantique, both movements, on one piano. The programme also features Antonio’s transcription for solo piano of the second movement (Fiesta Criolla) of Gottschalk’s monumental Nuit des Tropiques, (Night in the Tropics), a symphony Gottschalk wrote on the island of Martinique after living several years in Cuba. It is a historic work because it is the first symphony written by an American composer. After Gottschalk’s death, his friend Nicolas Ruiz Espadero published a two-piano version of this symphony which is the basis for Antonio’s transcription. In addition, the CD features piano music by well-known Cuban composers whose works all have connections to Gottschalk in one way or another.

