Lang Lang – Lang Lang in Paris (2015)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:26:37 minutes | 1,30 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Sony Classical
Lang Lang & Chopin have long been a winning combination, with the 2012 release of The Chopin Album being his most successful Sony album to date. Already celebrated worldwide for his Chopin interpretation, Lang Lang selects the four virtuosic and well known “Scherzi” to display his interpretative ability and renowned technical command.
This new release, Lang Lang in Paris, also champions the rarer Tchaikovsky “Seasons”. Tchaikovsky has also featured prominently in Lang Lang’s career – most notably in his international breakthrough at age 17 performing Tchaikovsky’s first piano concerto at Ravinia’s “Gala of the Century” with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.
Having performed this recital programme all over the world, Lang Lang felt it was the right time for him to record it in Paris – a city he loves & feels at home in.
Read moreLang Lang – Lang Lang at the Movies (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:10:16 minutes | 643 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Sony Classical
Lang Lang has contributed to the soundtracks of blockbuster films like My Week with Marilyn and Kung Fu Panda 3. In this compilation, he also plays legendary original movie tunes in piano arrangements, as well as some all-time classics that found new fame when they were used as film music. A fascinating journey through the cinematic universe.
Soundtrack albums and film score recordings are hardly in short supply. But when a pianist of Lang Lang’s calibre illuminates the world of motion pictures with his artistry, it turns every piece and every movie into a special event.
Features 2CELLOS, Herbie Hancock, Lindsey Stirling, Madeleine Peyroux and Maxim Vengerov.
Read moreLang Lang – Lang Lang at Royal Albert Hall (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz | Time – 01:45:41 minutes | 878 MB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Sony Classical
In November 2013 Lang Lang returned to London’s legendary Royal Albert Hall for two sold-out recitals – finishing a celebrated two-part program consisting of Mozart and Chopin with no less than eight encores, breaking Evgeny Kissin’s record of encores at the same place. This 120-minute album captures the complete recital and offers an opportunity to relive an unforgettable concert experience. The three early Mozart Piano Sonatas have been part of Lang Lang’s latest recital which he presented live in more than 200 concerts worldwide – the recordings that were captured at his RAH concert are also part of the new Mozart album.
Read moreLang Lang – Bach: Goldberg Variations (Extended Deluxe Edition) (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 03:55:30 minutes | 4,60 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Deutsche Grammophon (DG)
Lang Lang presents the Goldberg Variations Extended Deluxe Edition, the upcoming edition features seven bonus tracks and is set for release as a digital album on 12 February 2021. This new digital edition includes 7 brand-new tracks by Bach and his contemporaries, added to Lang Lang’s studio recording and his live version of the Goldberg Variation.
Read moreLang Lang – Bach: Goldberg Variations (Deluxe Edt. Studio + Live) (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 03:22:18 minutes | 3,97 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Deutsche Grammophon (DG)
Lang Lang has realised a lifelong dream by recording Johann Sebastian Bach’s monumental keyboard work, the Goldberg Variations, often described as “a musical Everest”. It will be released in two complementary performances given by the pianist: the first was recorded in a single take in concert at the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, Bach’s workplace for almost 30 years and site of his grave; the second was made soon after in the seclusion of the studio. The two recordings can be purchased together as part of a super deluxe edition, a world first simultaneous live and studio album release.
Read moreLang Lang, Vienna Philharmonic, Valery Gergiev – Liszt: My Piano Hero (2011) DSF DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC
Lang Lang, Vienna Philharmonic, Valery Gergiev – Liszt: My Piano Hero (2011)
DSD64 (.dsf) 1 bit/2,82 MHz | Time – 01:05:38 minutes | 2,58 GB
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 01:05:38 minutes | 1,29 GB
Souce: SACD-R | Artwork: Front Cover | Genre: Classical | © Sony Classics
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of Franz Liszt’s birth, virtuoso pianist Lang Lang has selected some of the composer’s most characteristic pieces for his 2011 Sony release, Liszt: My Piano Hero. Prominent on this album is the Piano Concerto No. 1 in E flat major, which features Lang Lang in a high-energy performance with Valery Gergiev and the Vienna Philharmonic. Without a doubt, most of Lang Lang’s fans will savor this Romantic showpiece, and for technical brilliance and drama, the performance doesn’t disappoint. He is especially lively and vivid in this work, and his interactions with the orchestra seem spontaneous and playful, as one might well imagine Liszt would have been. But Lang Lang seems more introspective and personally involved with the solo keyboard pieces that make up the greater part of the album. Here also is the flashy side of Liszt, but there is a greater emphasis on the poetic and rhapsodic, so Lang Lang indulges in reflective pieces as much as the flashy encores. Highlights include La Campanella, the Grand Galop chromatique, Liebestraum No. 3, the Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6, and the arrangement of Schubert’s Ave Maria.
Read moreLang Lang, St. Petersburg Philharmonic – Live At The Proms (2002)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DST64 2.0 & 5.1 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 60:33 minutes | Scans included | 4,21 GB
or FLAC 2.0 Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 1,27 GB
Recorded in DSD. Features Stereo and Multichannel surround sound | Telarc # SACD-60582
Recorded during live concert performances, Lang Lang’s second Telarc release justifies all the positive buzz surrounding this young pianist’s rapidly ascending international career. He brings plenty of finger power and long-lined drama to Rachmaninov’s ubiquitous Third Concerto, yet takes plenty of time to let the lyrical, soaring tunes spin without an inkling of self-indulgence. He admirably adjusts the piano part to accompany when he doesn’t bear the melodic burden, and he gets more expressive mileage from transitions than many pianists do. For once, the thicker, more difficult first movement cadenza doesn’t sound unwieldy and elephantine. The piano is a little too prominent in the mix next to Temirkanov’s sensitively detailed, flowing orchestral support. While Lang Lang has not fully internalized the quivering underbelly of Scriabin’s passionate keyboard writing, his poised and secure readings of 10 Etudes still boast plenty of dynamism, idiomatic nuance, and roaring, Horowitz-like octaves.
Read moreLang Lang – The Disney Book (2022)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 01:39:25 minutes | 3,40 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Deutsche Grammophon (DG)
The most unforgettable songs from Disney’s iconic films, reimagined by the greatest living pianist, Lang Lang’s The Disney Book tells the story of a century of magical, joyous entertainment for all. Join Lang Lang on an uplifting, virtuosic journey to experience beloved songs from Disney films with collaborators from across the globe, including Andrea Bocelli, Sebastián Yatra & Jon Batiste, performing hits from Snow White, Encanto, Beauty and the Beast, Pinocchio and many more.
Read moreLang Lang – The Chopin Album (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:15:35 minutes | 1,06 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Source: Q0buz | @ Sony Classical
The Chopin Album is Lang Lang’s first recording for Sony devoted entirely to the solo piano music of the Romantic master, focused on the Études, Op. 25, with three of the most popular Nocturnes and a handful of other pieces included for good measure. While Lang Lang’s phenomenal popularity guarantees this CD’s success, and his ability to play the technically demanding Études will impress his fans, devotees of Chopin’s music may be skeptical of the pianist’s interpretations, which at their best are flashy and extroverted. While it’s not necessary to play Chopin close to the vest, with the expressive reticence of a wallflower, Lang Lang is no introvert, and it shows in the pieces where sensitivity and poetic refinement are desirable. He plays with his customary bravado in the loudest Études, the Grande Valse Brillante, the Grande Polonaise, and even in the inaccurately nicknamed “Minute” Waltz, but his expression at softer levels seems affectless, uninvolved, and rather uninteresting. While connoisseurs may balk at this fairly showy album, it is sure to appeal to a wide audience, perhaps most especially because of the inclusion of Lang Lang’s duet with Danish singer Oh Land, “Tristesse,” which is based on Chopin’s Étude in E major, Op. 10/3, and taken from the soundtrack for the film The Flying Machine. Sony’s sound is generally good, though Lang Lang’s dynamic range is wide enough to make setting the volume a little tricky. –AllMusic Review by Blair Sanderson
Read moreLang Lang – Liszt: My Piano Hero (2011)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/96 kHz | Time – 01:05:30 minutes | 0,97 GB | Genre: Classical
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Source: Q0buz | @ Sony Classical
Recorded: April 23-28, 2011, Teldex Studio, Berlin, Germany (#1-10); June 4 & 5, 2011, Großer Saal, Musikverein, Vienna, Austria (#11-12)
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of Franz Liszt’s birth, virtuoso pianist Lang Lang has selected some of the composer’s most characteristic pieces for his 2011 Sony release, Liszt: My Piano Hero. Prominent on this album is the Piano Concerto No. 1 in E flat major, which features Lang Lang in a high-energy performance with Valery Gergiev and the Vienna Philharmonic. Without a doubt, most of Lang Lang’s fans will savor this Romantic showpiece, and for technical brilliance and drama, the performance doesn’t disappoint. He is especially lively and vivid in this work, and his interactions with the orchestra seem spontaneous and playful, as one might well imagine Liszt would have been. But Lang Lang seems more introspective and personally involved with the solo keyboard pieces that make up the greater part of the album. Here also is the flashy side of Liszt, but there is a greater emphasis on the poetic and rhapsodic, so Lang Lang indulges in reflective pieces as much as the flashy encores. Highlights include La Campanella, the Grand Galop chromatique, Liebestraum No. 3, the Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6, and the arrangement of Schubert’s Ave Maria. –AllMusic Review by Blair Sanderson
Read moreСomposer: Frederic Chopin (1810-1849), Piotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (1840-1893)
Title: Lang Lang – Live In Versailles
Release Date: 2015
Genre: Classical
Artist: Lang Lang, piano
Production/Label: Sony Classical
Duration: 01:31:03
Quality: Blu-ray
Container: BDMV
Video codec: AVC
Audio codec: DTS, PCM
Video: MPEG-4 AVC 31000 kbps / 1920*1080i / 29,970 fps / 16:9 / High Profile 4.1
Audio#1: DTS-HD MA 5.0 / 48 kHz / 3163 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 5.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
Audio#2: LPCM 2.0 / 48 kHz / 2304 kbps / 24-bit
Subtitles: English, French, German
Size: 25.29 GB
Ever since his first visit to the magical space that is the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles, Lang Lang had dreamed of performing there. When his dream came to fruition in the form of a special recital on June 22, 2015 he chose Chopin’s four momentous Scherzi and Tchaikovsky’s rare but masterly cycle The Seasons to present to his audience. The live concert was filmed in 4K in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles.
Tchaikovsky and Chopin have both played a major role in Lang Lang’s career to date. When Lang Lang, as a 17-year-old, stood in for an indisposed André Watts at a Ravinia concert with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the work he played was Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto.
If Tchaikovsky has appeared at pivotal moments in Lang Lang’s career, Chopin has been a constant companion: a recital rarely goes by without music by the Polish master on the programme and Lang Lang has already recorded a substantial amount of his music, including the Études and the Ballades (which Lang Lang sees as siblings to the Scherzi).
Lang Lang is a committed advocate of Tchaikovsky’s The Seasons. As he says, “Even though there are not so many notes compared to more virtuosic pieces, the harmony that Tchaikovsky creates within these notes is incredible. His timeless melodies have a kind of pain that he always turns into beauty. He presents his heart, and he holds your heart.”
Title: Lang Lang – The Chopin Dance Project
Release Date: 2015
Genre: Classical, Ballet
Director: Michelle Elliot (stage), Olivier Simonnet (video)
Choreograph: Stanton Welch
Artist: Lang Lang, piano with dancers of the Houston Ballet: Derek Dunn, Ian Casady, James Gotesky, Karina Gonzalez, Oliver Halkowich, Jessica Collado, Nozomi Iijima, Brian Wadrep, Charles-Louis Yoshiyama, Jim Nowakowski, Melody Mennite, Allison Miller, Lauren Strongin, Joseph Walsh, Katharine Precourt, Brian Waldrep, Connor Walsh
Production/Label: Sony Classical
Duration: 01:26:56
Quality: Blu-ray
Container: BDMV
Video codec: AVC
Audio codec: DTS, PCM
Video: MPEG-4 AVC 25995 kbps / 1920*1080i / 29,970 fps / 16:9 / High Profile 4.1
Audio#1: English DTS-HD MA 5.0 / 48 kHz / 3175 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 5.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
Audio#2: English LPCM 2.0 / 48 kHz / 2304 kbps / 24-bit
LANG LANG – THE CHOPIN DANCE PROJECT With dancers of the Houston Ballet Choreographed by Stanton Welch Filmed at the Theatre des Champs Elysees. In November 2013 Lang Lang and internationally acclaimed choreographer Stanton Welch teamed up to explore a new collaboration by combining a live piano recital with a live ballet performance.The performances took place at the renowned Théâtre des Champs Elysées in Paris, France over four evenings with 16 dancers of the Houston Ballet, one of the largest and most prestigious ballet companies of the United States.Stanton Welch’s choreography is built upon a selection of piano music by Chopin, chosen by Lang Lang because of its visual nature and dance potential. This 85-minute film captures the complete performance and offers an opportunity to re-live an unforgettable live experience. (more…)
Read moreWorld-renowned pianist LANG LANG continues his celebration of composer Franz Liszt’s 200th Birthday with LISZT NOW. The new video features Live at The Roundhouse, a 60-minute live concert from the 2011 iTunes Festival in London and The Art of Being a Virtuoso, a 71-minute documentary following Lang Lang’s global celebrations of Franz Liszt’s anniversary. Also included is A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt, 55 minutes of bonus content featuring video projections used at the Roundhouse concert set to select studio recordings from Lang Lang’s latest album, Liszt: My Piano Hero.
Live at The Roundhouse:
-La campanella in G-sharp Minor from Grandes études de Paganini
-Un sospiro in D-flat Major from Trois études de Concert
-Theme and variations in A Minor from Grandes etudes de Paganini
-Romance “O pourquoi donc” in E Minor
-Standchen (“Leise flehen meine Lieder”)
-Rakoczy March from Hungarian Rhapsody No. 15 in A Minor
-Consolation No. 2 in E Major
-Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 in D-flat Major
-Widmung
-Ave Maria
The Art of Being a Virtuoso: 71-minute documentary with Lang Lang
A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt:
55 minutes of video set to select studio recordings from Liszt: My Piano Hero
Track Listing:
1. The Art of being a Virtuoso
2. La campanella in G-Sharp Minor from Grandes études de Paganini, S 141/3 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
3. Un sospiro in D-Flat Major from Trois études de Concert, S 144/3 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
4. Theme and variations in A Minor from Grandes études de Paganini, S 141/6 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
5. Romance “O pourquoi donc” in E Minor, S 169 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
6. Ständchen (“Leise flehen meine Lieder”), S 560/7 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
7. Rakoczy March from Hungarian Rhapsody No. 15 in A Minor, S 244/15 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
8. Consolation No. 2 in E Major, S 172/2 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
9. Hungarian Rhapsody No. 6 in D-Flat Major, S 244/6 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
10. Widmung, S 566 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
11. Ave Maria S 558 (A Visual Journey with Franz Liszt)
Classical music as a genre and those who perform it as a career are not usually thought of as harbingers of the new and innovative. Long the refuge of established repertoire and long frozen tradition, the world of classical music often has, rightly or wrongly, the slightly musty smell of a museum about it. And so what are fans of classical music to make of Lang Lang, a Chinese born piano prodigy who not only Tweets, updates his Facebook wall regularly, and now has entered the 3D Blu-ray fray (at least partially) with his first Sony release Lang Lang Live in Vienna? The torch has obviously been passed to a new generation of classical artist, and if the music is still the same, the individual interpreting it is most definitely a new sort of presence, one who embraces the latest technology and wants that technology to work for the greater dissemination of the music itself. Lang Lang moved to the United States when he was 15, and is a product of the vaunted Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where he was mentored by Gary Graffman. Possessing a febrile technique which can make his hands virtually a blur at times—even in hi-def—Lang Lang is also a modernist in the best sense, a kid at heart who is obviously excited to be recording for Sony and to be touring to some of the most awe inspiring venues in the world, including in this instance Vienna’s incredible Musikverein, a gold-laden concert hall where the artist is literally surrounded by the audience. It’s instructive to note that Lang Lang chose a completely different venue for the 3D portion of this Blu-ray (included as an extra), the hipper than hip Berghain Club in Berlin. The times, they are a-changin’.
Lang Lang, despite being Chinese born, has become more than fluent in English, he’s positively eloquent, and so I would like to include some of his own quotes (culled from this disc’s excellent insert booklet) about the pieces he plays. The Musikverein concert lasts around two hours and showcases Lang Lang’s incredible technique, obviously, but perhaps more impressively his interpretative range. Lang Lang moves from Beethoven to Prokofiev to Albéniz to Chopin with ease, rarely letting the seams of these huge stylistic variances show. Lang Lang starts the concert off with Beethoven’s relatively early Sonata No. 3, Op. 2. Lang Lang discusses this piece in some detail in the liner notes. “I wanted to have a very solid, classic first half and, as I’ve not recorded any Beethoven sonatas before, I thought this would be a good way to start a relationship with Sony. . .Beethoven had already found himself: just look at the second movement Adagio. It’s absolutely Beethoven and in many ways it’s incredibly mature.” Though Lang Lang goes on to discuss Beethoven breaking from the Haydn-esque mold (though this piece is dedicated to Haydn), there is a flurry of scalar passages, especially in the opening movement, that is highly redolent of Mozart.
We jump from an early Sonata to one of the crowning glories of Beethoven’s piano output, the Piano Sonata No. 23, Op. 57, known familiarly as the “Appassionata.” This is a piece which demands both a classical restraint as well as sudden bursts of Romantic fury. “Like every other pianist, I grew up with the piece,” states Lang Lang. “What I like about the piece is the mystery behind the notes. It’s like an enormous volcano beneath the surface, a dark environment, hidden and needing to be explored. There’s a lot of anger there, too, and revolution.” Lang Lang also discusses the technique required to bring the Appassionata fully to life, a “low to the keyboard” approach that almost seems bound by some inextricable force of gravity from which the music struggles, successfully, to escape. Lang Lang’s interpretation is fully formed, and the Andante is especially brilliantly structured, foreshadowing the Fifth Symphony in both motives and emotional content.
It’s a testament to Lang Lang’s indisputable virtuosity that he ventures next into quasi-Impressionistic territory with a beautifully colorful account of Book I of Isaac Albéniz’ Iberia. Lang Lang is obviously not immune to the fact that he is playing in the handprints as it were of such impeccable interpreters of Albéniz as Alicia de Larrocha. “You can’t compare her to anyone else, she’s just unique,” the young pianist admits. “Everything she does makes perfect sense. I once had the privilege to see her playing Granados’ Goyescas. I’ll never forget the way she played the ‘Girl and the Nightinglae.’ She had the most beautiful touch, truly inspiring.” Lang Lang is in fact a little more deliberate than de Larrocha in his approach to Albéniz, as if he is whipping together colors from a huge kaleidoscopic pinwheel. But that athletic approach works perfectly for the music, especially with regard to its percussive elements.
The concert closes its main section with a stunning performance of Prokofiev’s fiendishly difficult Piano Sonata No. 7, Op. 83. From the opening triplet motive to the closing waning percussive moments that expire like a wounded soldier meeting his demise, Lang Lang is completely in control in a piece that demands utmost concentration and an astounding variety of approaches, from near violent percussive attacks to more placid lyrical passages. What is more than slightly amazing about Lang Lang throughout this piece is his calm and fortitude, the languid eye at the center of a pianistic storm. “I try to create this warlike mood and warlike spirit,” Lang Lang explains. “It’s more explosive but like the Appassionata it’s a very deep work. Prokofiev wrote about seeing many dead bodies on the street and I think you can hear the pain and horror in the development section of the first movement.”
After Lang Lang takes his initial bows and receives the customary bouquets from a couple of women in the audience (whom he kisses), he’s back for the encore segment, a nice tribute to the 200th birthday of Chopin. Lang Lang takes us on a virtuosic journey through three wonderfully expressive pieces, Étude Op. 25, No. 1, Polonaise No. 6, Op. 53 “Heroic,” and Grande Valse Brilliante No. 2, Op. 34 No. 1. Lang Lang is at his quicksilver best here, easily handling the huge voicings of Chopin and the intricate chromaticism Chopin extracts from sometimes relatively traditional harmonies. “For me, Chopin is a total genius,” states Lang Lang in the perhaps obvious department. “You listen to his music and here was someone who could really turn the piano from a percussive instrument into an operatic instrument.” Lang Lang also discussed Chopin’s innovative fingering choices, something anyone who’s attempted to conquer a Chopin piece can tell you keeps your hands busy in crossing over and under. It goes without saying Lang Lang has little trouble performing these acrobatic feats.
http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Lang-Lang-Live-in-Vienna-Blu-ray/13137/
Read moreLang.Lang.The.Third.Dimension.At.Berghain.3D.2010.1080p.MBluRay.x264-LOUNG3D | 3.28 GB
Classical music as a genre and those who perform it as a career are not usually thought of as harbingers of the new and innovative. Long the refuge of established repertoire and long frozen tradition, the world of classical music often has, rightly or wrongly, the slightly musty smell of a museum about it. And so what are fans of classical music to make of Lang Lang, a Chinese born piano prodigy who not only Tweets, updates his Facebook wall regularly, and now has entered the 3D Blu-ray fray (at least partially) with his first Sony release Lang Lang Live in Vienna? The torch has obviously been passed to a new generation of classical artist, and if the music is still the same, the individual interpreting it is most definitely a new sort of presence, one who embraces the latest technology and wants that technology to work for the greater dissemination of the music itself. Lang Lang moved to the United States when he was 15, and is a product of the vaunted Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, where he was mentored by Gary Graffman. Possessing a febrile technique which can make his hands virtually a blur at times—even in hi-def—Lang Lang is also a modernist in the best sense, a kid at heart who is obviously excited to be recording for Sony and to be touring to some of the most awe inspiring venues in the world, including in this instance Vienna’s incredible Musikverein, a gold-laden concert hall where the artist is literally surrounded by the audience. It’s instructive to note that Lang Lang chose a completely different venue for the 3D portion of this Blu-ray (included as an extra), the hipper than hip Berghain Club in Berlin. The times, they are a-changin’.(Read More … http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Lang-Lang-Live-in-Vienna-Blu-ray/13137/#Review)
Read more