Universal Music said Thursday that pianist Paik Kun-woo will release a new album, "Schubert," on the 26th.
It is Paik’s first Schubert recording in 13 years, following his 2013 release "Schubert: Impromptus, Klavierstücke, Moments musicaux." The album is positioned as a personal milestone for Paik, who marks the 70th anniversary of his debut and his 80th birthday this year. Ahead of the release, "Schubert: Piano Sonata No. 13 in A major, D.664, first movement" will be issued as an advance track Thursday.
The two-CD set features Schubert’s Piano Sonatas Nos. 13 and 14, along with late-period Sonatas Nos. 18 and 20, linking Schubert’s musical world with Paik’s own career arc.
"This choice spans the beginning and end of my performing life," Paik said. "No. 13 (D.664) is one of the earliest piano sonatas I learned and a work I have always loved, and No. 20 (D.959) is a piece I left aside for a long time because I couldn’t find an answer." He said he recorded the works to revisit them "from where I have arrived now" and to move closer to the truth.
Paik recalled that while he performed and recorded Schubert’s final sonata (D.960) when he was younger, he was unable to bring D.959 to the stage for many years.
"The second movement felt like a fantasy beyond order, and the theme of the fourth movement went on endlessly through repetition," he said. "For years I tried to find an answer, but perhaps because I wanted it so badly, I couldn’t see it." He added that only recently did he realize that rather than trying to do something, he needed to try "not to do."
"Letting the music sing on its own, and the confidence to endure that silence — this attitude, reached through serious and sincere inquiry, is the biggest difference between my Schubert 13 years ago and my Schubert now," he said.
Paik was born in Seoul in 1946 and made his debut at age 10, performing Grieg’s Piano Concerto with the Navy Symphony Orchestra, now the Seoul Philharmonic Orchestra. At 15, he moved to the United States to continue his studies at the Juilliard School, and later performed across the United States and Europe.
Paik now lives in Paris and is preparing a recital tour tied to the album release. Beginning in April, he will visit 12 cities nationwide. The final stop, in Seoul, is set for May 10 — his birthday — at the Seoul Arts Center Concert Hall. The program includes Schubert’s Sonatas Nos. 13 and 20 and Brahms’ Four Ballades, and he is also preparing to publish an autobiography.
* This article has been translated by AI.
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