Rameau, Complete Pièces de Clavecin (Hyperion, 2014)
What the reviewers say…
“A key factor in determining the longevity of an interpretation is the degree to which the performer succeeds in characterising the music and, on this point alone, top marks must go to Mahan Esfahani, who seems always to have its measure and brings unfailing wit, affection, fluency and pacing to his interpretations…Having just won a Gramophone Award for his superlative CPE Bach recording, Esfahani has surely trumped it with Rameau’s solo harpsichord works.”
Julie Anne Sadie, Gramophone
“Mahan Esfahani’s second Hyperion recording comprises Rameau’s keyboard works. This is stylish playing but rarely showy, firm but never heavy in dance movements, imbued with a natural wit in the character pieces. I could easily have picked his delightful disc of C. P. E. Bach’s Württemberg Sonatas as well.”
David Allen, The New York Times
“Esfahani is the poet of the harpsichord. For people who don’t like harpsichordists he is the one that will convince you to listen. He’s such a beautiful player and he is totally natural. He understands the dramatics of each movement and he projects it and, for me, it is totally persuasive.”
Richard Morrison, BBC CD Review
Gramophone Editor's Choice
5 stars - Diapason
New York Times Top Classical Recordings of 2014
Byrd – Bach – Ligeti, Live at Wigmore Hall (WH Live, 2014)
Released by Wigmore Hall Live in 2014, from a May 2013 recital at Wigmore Hall, London.
“The harpsichord may never quite be mainstream material, but you sense that, if it were ever to get there, Esfahani might just be the man to make it happen.”
International Record Review
Pavan and Galliard No. 1 in C Minor, MB 29: Pavan
Musical Offering, BWV 1079: Canon a 2 per tonos
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714-1788) Württemberg Sonatas
Hyperion is delighted to present the debut recording of the wonderful young harpsichordist Mahan Esfahani. He was the first harpsichordist to be named a BBC New Generation Artist or to be awarded a fellowship prize by the Borletti-Buitoni Trust.
Here Mahan Esfahani has recorded CPE Bach’s six ‘Württemberg’ sonatas, which were written in 1742-3 and published in 1744, and his thrillingly intense performances make the best possible case for this dramatic, beautifully written, endlessly imaginative but for some reason under-performed music. The sonatas range stylistically from initial stirrings of Sturm und Drang in keyboard music to sublime imitations of the human voice, with nods to the High Baroque and the idiom of CPE Bach’s more famous father. Mahan writes in his booklet notes that ‘Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach makes the most combative statement possible to assert his new musical language’.
Gramophone Awards 2014 Best Baroque Instrumental Album
Sunday Times album of the week
Gramophone Magazine editor's choice
BBC Music Magazine recording of the month
Diapason d'Or May 2014
Sonata in E flat major, H34 - Adagio
Sonata in E flat major, H34 - Allegro assai