Michael Finnissy: Piano Works
Métier presents a landmark 4-disc box set from pianist Ian Pace in commanding performances of music by composer Michael Finnissy (b. 1946). Finnissy is widely regarded as one of Britain’s most important living composers. Pace, one of the leading interpreters of Finnissy’s work, presents an album focused around Finnissy’s epic cycle for piano, the Verdi Transcriptions, alongside the second complete recording (after the composer’s own) of the iconic English Country-Tunes, and works inspired by music of the late-18th and 19th. The result is a broad view of Finnissy’s extensive output of piano music in relation to romantic aesthetics. The album is released in anticipation of the Métier label’s upcoming celebrations of Michael Finnissy’s 80th birthday in 2026.
Finnissy’s four-book cycle of Verdi Transcriptions re-imagines Verdi’s operas through a modern lens. As Finnissy states in his liner notes, “Transcribing sound into a written form (notation) involves making significant choices. The choices can colour the ongoing exploration of that sound as ‘composition’.” The result of those choices is a monumental, late-Romantic epic.
Finnissy’s English Country-Tunes has long been considered one of his signature and most technically demanding cycles. There is a similar line of composition through transcription as the Verdi Transcriptions, only in these works, the source material is English folk music. Written in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II’s Silver Jubilee, the work can also be seen as a commentary on the spirit of British patriotism at the time.
Ian Pace’s readings reflect decades of study: he first performed English Country-Tunes in the 1990s and has played Finnissy’s complete piano oeuvre in cycles (1996 and 2016). The set includes extensive liner notes by both Pace and Finnissy, offering rare insight into the compositional ideas and performance choices behind these demanding works. In Pace’s recording of Michael Finnissy’s other epic piano cycle, The History of Photography in Sound (MSV 77501), BBC Music raved, “Pace’s intimate acquaintance with the totality of History is apparent in his commanding performance … this is a magnificent achievement for both composer and performer,” and Gramophone hailed Pace as “Finnissy’s David Bailey, each note shaded to perfection, structures translucently and sharply lit, defining sonic images of our
time.”
Track Listing
Verdi Transcriptions, Book 1
- I. Oberto, Act II: Aria. “Sciagurata! a questo lido ricercai l’amante infido!” (5:17)
- II. Un giorno di regno, Act I: Trio. “Bella speranza in vero” (2:25)
- III. Nabucco, Part 2: Chorus. “Il maledetto non ha fratelli” (1:25)
- IV. I Lombardi, Act III: Chorus. “Fra tante sciagure…” (2:09)
- V. Ernani, Part 1: Septet with Chorus. “Vedi come il buon vegliardo…” (4:21)
- VI. I Due Foscari, Act III: Choral Barcarolle. “Tace il vento, è queta l’onda” (5:52)
- VII. Giovanna d’Arco, Act I: Aria. “So che per via di triboli” (2:36)
- VIII. Alzira, Act II: Duet. “Il pianto…l’angoscia…di lean mi priva” (3:19)
- IX. Attila, Act I: Aria. “Mentre gonfiarsi l’Anima” (7:05)
- X. Duetto. Attila: Duetto. “Vanitosi! Che abietti e dormenti” (5:05)
- XI. Macbeth, Act IV (1847 Version): Coro. “Patria oppressa! Il dolce nome…” (1:47)
- XII. I masnadieri: Duetto. “Qual mare, qual terra…” (4:07)
- XIII. Jérusalem, Act I: Récit et Duo. “Non, ce bruit, ce n’est rien…” (3:14)
- XIV. Il Corsaro, Act I: Romanza. “Non so le tetre immagini” (1:16)
- XV. La Battaglia di Legnano, Act IV: Inno di Vittoria. “Dall’Alpi a Caridi echeggi vittoria!” (1:48)
- XVI. Luisa Miller, Act II: Scena e Quartetto. “Rea fucina d’empie frodi…” (1:12)
- XVII. Stiffelio, Act III: Duetto. “Opposto é il calle che in avvenire” (3:32)
- XVIII. Rigoletto, Act I: Scena e Coro. “Vendetta del pazzo! Contr’esso un rancore” (0:51)
- Yvaropera 1(3:33)
- Yvaropera 2 (2:37)
- Yvaropera 3 (3:29)
- Yvaropera 4 (3:21)
- Yvaropera 5 (4:04)
Verdi Transcriptions, Book 3
- XIX. Rigoletto, Act III: Canzone. “La donna è mobile” (1:03)
- XX. Il Travatore, Act IV Scene 1: Duo. “Vivra! Contende il giubilo” (1:19)
- XXI. La traviata, Act III: Duetto. “È nulla, sai?” (3:05)
- XXII. Les vêpres siciliennes, Act V Scene 2: Boléro. “Merci, jeunes amies, d’un souvenir si doux!” (5:30)
- XXIII. Simon Boccanegra (1857 Version): Scena. “Tradimento!” (3:33)
- XXIV. Aroldo, Act IV: Coro, Burrasca e Finale. “Allora che gl’anni” (8:25)
- XXV. Un ballo di maschera, Act I: Stretta. “Ogni cura si doni al diletto” (1:56)
- XXVI. La forza del destino Act I: Romanza. “Me pellegrina ed orfano” (4:44)
- XXVII. Macbeth, Act II: Aria. “Trionfai! Securi alfino” – “La luce langue” (4:02)
- Green Meadows (9:32)
- Midsummer Morn (4:30)
- I’ll give my love a garland (8:39)
- May and December (6:14)
- Lies and Marvels (3:59)
- The seeds of love (4:19)
- My bonny boy (6:35)
- Come beat the drums and sound the fifes (4:12)
Verdi Transcriptions, Book 4
- XXVIII. Macbeth, Act I: Chorus. “S’allontanarono! N’accozzeremo” (4:55)
- XXIX. Don Carlos: Duo. “Restez! Auprès de ma personne” – Duo. “J’ai tout compris” (11:35)
- XXX. Aida, Act III: Romanza. “O cieli azzuri…” (1:10)
- XXXI. String Quartet: III. Prestissimo – IV. Scherzo fuga (5:06)
- XXXII. Simon Boccanegra, Act II: Aria. “Cielo, pietoso, rendila” (6:34)
- XXXIII. Don Carlo, Act V: Aria. “Tu che la vanità conoscesti” (22:39)
- XXXIV. Ballet No. 3: “Chanson Grecque” – Otello, Act III: Scena. “Una gran nube turba” (3:03)
- XXXV. Falstaff, Act III Part 1: “Brava! Quelle corna saranno la mio gioia!” (4:55)
- XXXVI. Messa de Requiem: I. Requiem Aeternam (10:13)
- Romeo and Juliet are Drowning (4:04)
- William Billings (3:53)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 1 (7:35)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 2 (1:45)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 3 (3:16)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 4 (3:43)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 5 (1:21)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 6 (2:34)
- Beethoven’s Robin Adair 7 (3:19)
- Rossini (2:27)
- Preambule zu Carnaval (3:02)
- Symphonische Etude 1 (6:00)
- Symphonische Etude 2 (4:06)
- What the meadow-flowers tell me (2:12)
- 1- (1:30)
- 2- (1:50)
- 3- (1:45)
- 4- (3:25)
- Wo die Zitronen blühn (4:07)
- O, schöner Mai (2:46)
- Geschichten aus dem Wienerwald (4:22)