Stravinsky’s joyous & psychedelically colourful transcription of 3 Movements from Petrushka. I’d heard some of Stravinsky’s other piano music before I got around to this, & didn't get the impression he was a terribly good composer for the instrument – but by the time I finished with this, I was like: Yeah, alright, he's a genius at this too. Just think of the number of textures here that you find basically nowhere else – the rapidfire planing chords at the beginning of the Russian Dance (weird to use the term planing, since the technique is used in such a drastically different way from Debussy), the bassoon line that peeps out from the middle of the texture at 0:55, the muted chordal tremolos at the beginning of The Shovetide Fair, the shy oboe at 8:44, the exuberant canon over the E pedal at 14:01, & all those wild passages of bright, obsessively folkish counterpoint (the 5 main melodies in The Shovetide Fair are derived from Russian folk songs, it turns out). And’s it’s not just about th
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