I have been listening to
Anna Gourari, Russian pianist
So far, two recordings:Visions Fugitive
"Visions fugitives, Gourari’s second ECM release, showcases the
intense beauty of her sound in Prokofiev’s title work, a set of 20
“fleeting visions” whose moods swing from lyrical to sardonic, grotesque
to calm, melancholy to boisterous, nostalgic to insistent, and back
again. The album also features Medtner’s “Fairy Tale in F minor”, from
one of his sets of skazki – tales of musical figments, of melodies and
harmonies, rhythmic profiles and altered chords, shapes and gestures and
atmospheres. Then there is Chopin’s “Sonata No. 3 in B minor”, which
encompasses not only a Beethoven-inspired opening movement but also a
Largo that’s like a funeral song, with a melodic poignancy that
justifies and even necessitates some extraordinary harmonic
progressions."
Desir"
The album “Désir”, released on Decca, presents works by Alexander Skryabin and Sofia Gubaidulina."
I like her very much, my preferred sort of music.Description on her website and in wiki:
„She plays Beethoven’s third Piano Concerto with a rapt intensity.
Right at the beginning she achieves a small miracle … a few chords,
woven like a curtain about to go up on a quiet paradise in waiting. She
performs the piece with a restrained voice, as if telling a story. She
is reminiscent of the young Clara Haskil. This is how Anna Gourari won
the Clara Schumann Competition.“ Thus Die Zeit reported the final
concert of a competition in which Anna Gourari was awarded first prize
by a distinguished jury including Martha Argerich, Joachim Kaiser,
Vladimir Ashkenazy, Nelson Freire and Alexis Weissenberg, whom she had
won over by the power of her „almost mystical playing“.
http://gourari.com/biography-en/