Recordings
Images Poetiques
Works by Mussorgsky, Smetana, Rachmaninov, Wagner/Liszt, and Ravel
Elizabeth's debut solo album features a tour de force program of fin de siècle masterworks, culminating in Mussorgsky's towering Pictures at an Exhibition. Released in 2010 by Universal Classics Korea / Deutsche Grammophon, it made a Top 20 debut in the Korean Classical Charts.
Official Album Website
Available on iTunes
TRACKLIST
1-2 | RACHMANINOV: Morceaux de fantaisie, Op. 3
3-4 | SMETANA: Czech Dances, Book 2
5 | WAGNER/LISZT: Isoldens Liebestod
6 | RAVEL: La Valse
7-22 | MUSSORGSKY: Pictures at an Exhibition
23 | BACH/SILOTI: Prelude in B minor [Bonus Track]
ELIZABETH JOY ROE'S FOREWORD TO IMAGES POETIQUES
Images speak volumes, filling in where words leave off. They are both figments of our imagination and the source of our imaginings. Images from art, nature, and everyday life can add dimension, color, and nuance to our incarnate experience, compelling us to shift paradigms and to see more truly. Perhaps the most powerful images are those invisible from the outside, the ones witnessed in our mind’s eye: our dreams, memories, visions. Here we might catch glimpses of the ultimate and the eternal, which radiantly pierce through the penumbral mysteries surrounding us, elevating us to greater heights of understanding.
The music on this album offers a kaleidoscopic synthesis of fin de siècle perspectives, from Liszt’s unabashed Romanticism to Ravel’s modernist leanings. Imagery from paintings, folklore, and literary narratives permeate these pieces. Most importantly, each work pulsates with the composer’s personal impressions, passions, and meditations, shedding light on our own humanity, and inspiring us to explore the intersections between fantasy and reality, the individual and the collective, and impermanence and infinity. This music encapsulates a fascinating era in history, but its resonance is timeless: it opens our eyes and hearts to glorious and astounding realms, awakens us to essential truths, and exalts images seen and unseen.
