Take pleasure in new music with our classical music chart for this week. Our weekly choices are primarily based on gross sales numbers and easily what albums we love and suppose you NEED to listen to.
For the entire high 20, tune into Classical Chartz with the New Classical FM’s Mark Wigmore each Saturday from 3-5 p.m.

Lang Lang and Piano E book II high the Classical Chartz for one more week, holding on to the No. 1 spot. Slightly below, Hildur Guðnadóttir’s The place To From and Christopher Tin’s Music Choices trade locations to finish up at No. 3 and No. 2 respectively. Isabelle Faust’s Telemann Violin Concertos holds the road at No. 4 for a second week.
This week, there are three newcomers to the Classical Chartz Prime Ten — Gautier Capuçon’s Gaïa, which makes the leap from No. 11 to No. 6, Vikingur Ólafsson’s Opus 109, which lands at No. 9, up from No. 14, and Alexandra Whittingham’s Letters From Paris, which rounds out the checklist at No. 10, up from No. 16.
French cellist Gautier Capuçon’s Gaïa options 17 world premiere authentic works by 16 composers, every exploring the connection between humanity and the pure world. Many various lenses are used to depict that relationship, with Capuçon’s cello turning into the voice of the earth in every.
“Every observe provides its personal voice to the cello, immersing us within the energy and depth of nature and the Earth, the supply of life,” Gautier explains within the album notes. “In every bit, it’s the Earth that expresses itself in music: generally fragile, generally majestic, at all times important. … This album can also be a music of warning, a hymn to this threatened magnificence, a prayer for future generations.”
Composers on the album embrace well-known names like Max Richter, Ludovico Einaudi, and Joe Hisaishi, together with lesser recognized artists corresponding to Armand Amar, Jasmine Barnes, Olivia Belli, Quenton Blache, Michael Canitrot, JB Dunckel, Missy Mazzoli, Gabriela Montero, Nico Muhly, Xavier Foley, and Ayanna Witter-Johnson. Bryce Dessner contributes two items.
Beethoven’s Piano Sonata No. 30 in E main, Op. 109 lies on the coronary heart of GRAMMY®-winning pianist Víkingur Ólafsson’s newest launch on the Deutsche Grammophon label. The work comes from Beethoven’s late interval, and Ólafsson has bookended the masterwork with the work of two composers he considers important to Op. 109.
The album contains items by J.S. Bach, together with his The Effectively-Tempered Clavier, E book I, BWV 846-869, Prelude & Fugue in E Main, BWV 854, Partita No.6 in E minor, BWV 830, and French Suite No.6 in E, BWV 817. The Icelandic pianist sees the works as precursors of Beethoven’s Sonata No. 30, in addition to his Piano Sonata No. 27 in E Minor, Op. 90, which can also be included on the album.
On the different finish of the dimensions, coming after Beethoven, he incorporates Schubert’s Piano Sonata No.6 in E minor, D566, an early work of the composer which was influenced by Op. 90.
Each Schubert and Beethoven, as Ólafsson notes, confront Bach “as each nice composer should.”
“France is the place it began for me,” says British guitarist Alexandra Whittingham within the album notes for Letters From Paris.
Alexandra Whittingham’s new launch on the Decca Classics label is, not surprisingly, an album of that celebrates French music, and France in a broader sense, drawing from centuries of music. There are works by Cabral, Piaf, Louiguy, Debussy, Durand, Tiersen, Fauré, Monnot, Kleynjans, Hahn, Aznavour, Satie, Chopin, Presti, Lutyens, Pravi, Igit, and Poe. The guitarist’s private connections to France, particularly the southwest, started at age 19, when she carried out her very first skilled recital at Puy-l’Évêque earlier than an viewers that included her mother and father. They subsequently purchased a property subsequent to the church the place she’d carried out, and since that point, Alexandra has spent a substantial amount of time in France.
Along with her performances, Alexandra has constructed a formidable on-line presence, with greater than 500,000 followers throughout varied social media platforms. She’s joined on the album by saxophonist Jess Gillam, fellow classical guitarist, Stephanie Jones, and cellist Margarita Balanas.
“I’m extremely excited to launch this album,” she says within the album notes. “It is a venture I’ve had in thoughts for thus lengthy, and it’s been so many enjoyable with the ability to realise these concepts while collaborating with such nice pals and musicians. I’ve at all times beloved pairing music by well-liked family names alongside composers that may be much less well-known exterior of the guitar world, and this file does precisely that.”
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