Three species of music are
included on this impressive volume of Rarities
of Piano Music at Schloss vor Husum 2017.
Firstly, there are a few works by
well-known composers that have achieved their place in the repertoire of many
pianists and feature in several recordings. Only two works fall into this
category: ‘Ludus tonalis’ by Paul Hindemith and Percy Grainger’s often-performed
‘Irish Tune from County Derry’.
‘Ludus tonalis’ is compendium of
twelve fugues and eleven interludes preceded by a prelude and concluding with a
fugue: it was composed in 1942, whilst the composer was in the United States.
It is subtitled ‘Studies in Counterpoint, Tonal Organisation and Piano Playing’.
The entire piece can be explained as a practical exploration of the composer’s
theoretical principles, balancing ‘didactic’ music with some perfectly
attractive pieces. Moscow-born pianist Lukas Geniušas performed the entire 50-minute
work at the 2017 Husum Festival. Here the vibrant Interludium (Vivace)[Fast], is
followed by the gigue-like Fuga quinta in E. The selection closes with the
introspective Interludium (Molto tranquillo) [Very Quiet].
The reflective Percy Grainger ‘Tune’
is played by the American soloist Daniel Berman in a manner that does not
over-egg the sentimentality of the piece.
The second group of pieces are
unknown works by ‘famous’ composers - either original or in transcription. An
obvious candidate for this is the ‘Tristanesque’ Elegie in A flat major by
Richard Wagner. Clearly better known for his five-hour operas, this little
miniature, played by Lukas Geniušas is haunting and utterly beautiful.
I will include Carl Czerny as a
‘famous’ name. Certainly, he is well-kent by piano students for his voluminous
quantities of studies of varying difficulty. He is rarely heard in the concert
hall. The present Variations on a Theme by Rode ‘La Ricordanza’, op. 33
(1822/3) is a pleasure. The Rode in question was Pierre Rode, who wrote much
music for the violin. I am not sure what work the ‘theme’ is derived from: the
words mean ‘The Remembrance.’ From the quiet presentation of the opening,
through the ever-increasing difficulty of succeeding variations, Italian-born Antonio
Pompa-Baldi keeps control of this sparkling music and presents a work that
demands to be in the repertoire of many more pianists.
Francis Poulenc [born in 1899 and
not 1866 as per track-listing] wrote much piano music. I guess that relatively
little is heard in recital rooms these days. Perhaps the Novelettes, Napoli and the ‘Mouvments perpetuels’
hold their own. I have always particularly admired the ‘Improvisations’ for
piano, after first hearing them in a ‘salon’ in Paris in 1979. The present ‘Les
chemins de l'amour’ was originally a song written as incidental music to Jean
Anouilh’s play Leocadia. Pompa-Baldi
has created an enjoyable and suitably urbane transcription this fine dance.
Sigismund Thalberg is well known
for his opera transcriptions. He has put his hand to music by Rossini, Donizetti,
Verdi, Mozart and Bellini. The present work is the Fantasy on ‘Casta Diva’
(From Bellini's Opera Norma), op. 70.
For listeners expecting fireworks from Thalberg’s pen, it will be
disappointment. This is a heartfelt fantasy played with perfectly measured
restraint by the Finnish pianist Satu Paavola.
The final piece in the section by
well-known composers is Chopin’s Nouvelle Etude No. 1, F Minor. The virtuoso
pianist Leopold Godowsky produced arrangements of Chopin’s music, making them
even harder to play. The most famous collection is the 53 Studies on Chopin's
Études (1894–1914). The present number was one of several pieces that Godowsky
did not complete. It has been finished by the present pianist Marc-André
Hamelin. This is a complex arrangement that showcases the rhythmic diversity of
Chopin’s original piece but does not descend into sheer exhibitionism.
The final group of pieces are by
largely unknown composers – at least to this reviewer. Gabriel Dupont was a
French musician born in Caen in 1878. He had a tragically short life, dying of
tuberculosis in 1914. His music was, I think, mainly for piano, although there
are several operas. The audience at Husum were presented with Dupont’s complete
‘Les heures dolentes’ (1905) played by Émile Naoumoff. This unusual work
depicted the sick pianist himself in bed hallucinating about his past life. The
gorgeous ‘Après-midi de Dimanche’ strikes a perfect balance between Fauré and
Debussy. Listen for a musical representation of church bells, heard in the
distance as Dupont lay ill. I will certainly try to hear more of his piano
music.
I was impressed by Marc-André
Hamelin’s Toccata on ‘L'homme armé’ composed in 2016. This was written as a
test piece for the 15th Van Cliburn Piano Competition held in Fort
Worth, Texas. The ‘toccata’ is based on a
once-popular French tune from the time of the Renaissance. The listener may
feel that Prokofiev is the inspiration for much of the harmonic activity in this
vibrant and sometimes acerbic piece. It is played with seemingly frightful ease
by the composer.
Leonid Desyatnikov (b.1955) is a
Russian composer from Kharkiv. Better known (apparently) for his film music and
operas. His ‘Reminiscences of the Theatre’ (2014) were constructed out of music
the composer had written in his youth for puppet shows. The suite is a
collection of pieces ‘depicting a small entertaining theatrical review.’
Listeners will be reminded of Elgar’s Wand
of Youth Suites and Robert Schumann’s Album
for the Young - in concept at least. There is nothing challenging about the
fifth number here, the very short ‘Rondo-Chase’, which certainly looks back to
a more romantic style of composition. It is played with affection by Lukas
Geniušas.
Equally ‘petite’ is American
all-rounder Abram Chasins’s Prelude in E flat minor: this lovely piece,
composed in 1928, is unashamedly quixotic in its mood.
Three composers were involved in
the realisation of the ‘popular’ song ‘Body and Soul’. It was originally
written by Johnny W. Green in 1930. It was included in several transcriptions
of ‘standards’ made by American pianist Earl Wild. However, it was unfinished
at the time of Wild’s death. So Daniel Berman, created a ‘performable version.’
It could be described as ‘souped-up’ cocktail piano music: and none the worse
for that.
A major discovery on this CD is Dmitri
Blagoy’s (1930-1986) Fairy Tale Sonata composed as late as 1958. He was a Soviet
Russian composer, journalist and teacher at the Moscow Music Academy. Despite
its title, the present Sonata would appear to have no programme or reference to
any fairy-tales. The music is a fusion of neo-classical and early Prokofiev. Certainly,
there is much that is ‘romantic’ in these pages. Listeners who have encountered
the piano music of Nicolai Medtner and his numerous ‘Skazki’ or fairy tales for
piano will appreciate Blagov’s achievement. It is stunningly played (in its
entirety) by Italian pianist Vincenzo Maltempo.
Maltempo also performs a short ‘Arabesque
valsante’, op. 6 by Russian-born Misha Levitzki (1898-1941) dating from 1936.
This is a good example of those charming miniatures that regularly crop up on
Husum Festival CDs. They are not master-pieces, but they make life even more
worth living!
Equally appealing is the romantic
sounding ‘Scherzo-Valse’ (1952) by fellow Russian Vladimir Drozdov (1882-1960).
This work, although some 130 years late with its Chopinesque style, is convincingly
played by the young Bulgarian pianist Nadejda Vlaeva. Her other representative
piece on this disc the Armenian composer Arno Babadjanian’s (1921-1983) deeply
moving ‘Elegy’ (1978) which acknowledges and reflects on the death of Aram Khachaturian.
Moving from Armenia to
Azerbaijan, Serbian pianist Misha Dacič plays two short pieces by Fikret Amirov
(1922-1984). They are gleaned from his ‘10 Miniatures’ which were composed in 1971.
Both the ‘Nocturne’ and the ‘Lullaby’ exhibit a profound response to the
folk-music of his country. Clearly
written during the ‘Soviet’ era, they are not challenging to the listener, just
perfectly stated.
The last track on this CD, played
by Dacič, is ‘El Vals del Duende’ written by the Argentine broadcaster,
musician, writer and actor, Alejandro Dolina and arranged by fellow- Argentinean
composer and pianist Pablo Ziegler. This is a moody, lugubrious little tango
that brings this splendid selection of rare piano music to a thoughtful
conclusion.
I have noted the outstanding playing
in the main body of my review. The general recording is excellent, despite
being made at live performances. The liner notes by Jesper Buhl are most helpful
and include much information on these ‘rare’ composers and their music. They
are printed in German and English.
There much to inspire interest on
this CD. I have said before about the Husum Festival CDs that it is practically
impossible to pick out highpoints: in fact, it is a continual highlight from the
first track to the last. Long may this series continue. And could the 2018’s
Festival compilation be released as a ‘doubler’ please?
Track Listings:
Carl CZERNY (1791-1857)
Variations on a Theme by Rode ‘La Ricordanza’, op. 33 (1822/3)
Francis POULENC (1899-1963)/Antonio POMPA-BALDI (b.1974) Les
chemins de l'amour (1940) Antonio Pompa-Baldi (piano)
Gabriel DUPONT (1878-1914)
From ‘Les heures dolentes’: No.5 Après-midi de dimanche
(1905)
Émile Naoumoff (piano)
Vincenzo BELLINI (1801-35)/Sigismund THALBERG (1812-71) Fantasy on
Casta Diva (From Bellini's Opera Norma),
op. 70 (?)
Satu Paavola (piano)
Frederic CHOPIN (1810-49)/Leopold GODOWSKY (1870-1938)/Marc-André HAMELIN (b.1961)
Nouvelle Etude No. 1, F Minor (?)
Marc-André HAMELIN
Toccata on ‘L'homme armé’ (2016)
Marc-André Hamelin (piano)
Paul HINDEMITH (1895-1963)
From ‘Ludus tonalis’ (1942) Interludium (Vivace); Fuga quinta in E (Vivace); Interludium
(Molto tranquillo)
Richard WAGNER (1813-83)
Elegie in A flat Major, WWV 93 (1882)
Leonid DESYATNIKOV
(b.1955) From ‘Reminiscences of the Theatre’ (2014) No. 5 Rondo-Chase
Lukas Geniušas (piano)
Abram CHASINS (1903-87)
Prelude in E flat Minor, op. 12, No. 2 (1928)
Percy GRAINGER (1882-1961)
Irish Tune from County Derry (1918)
John[ny] W. GREEN
(1908-89)/Earl WILD (1915-2010)/ Daniel BERMAN (b.1956) ‘Body and Soul’
(1930)
Daniel Berman (piano)
Dmitri BLAGOY (1930-1986)
Fairy Tale Sonata (1958)
Misha LEVITZKI (1898-1941)
Arabesque valsante, op. 6 (1934)
Vincenzo Maltempo (piano)
Vladimir DROZDOV (1882-1960)
Scherzo-Valse (1952)
Arno BABADJANIAN (1921-1983)
Elegy (1978)
Nadejda Vlaeva (piano)
Fikret AMIROV (1922-1984)
From ‘10 Miniatures’ (1971) ‘Nocturne’; Lullaby
Alejandro DOLINA (b.1945)/Pablo ZIEGLER (b.1944) El Vals del
Duende (?)
Misha Dacič (piano)
Rec. 18-26 August 2017 Schloss vor Husum
DANACORD DACOCD
799
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