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             Shehori Plays Russian Music  
              Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953) 
               
              Sonata No. 7 in B flat major, Op. 83 (1939-42) [18.24]  
              Mikhail GLINKA (1804-1857) - Mily 
              BALAKIREV (1837-1910)  
              The Skylark (L‘Alouette) [6:06]  
              Mily BALAKIREV (1837-1910)  
              Islamey - Oriental Fantasy (1869) [9:04]  
              Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
               
              The March from The Seasons Op.37 [2:02]  
              Romance in F minor Op.5 [6:08]  
              Dumka Op.59 [8:33]  
              Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
              - Pavel PABST (1854-1897) 
               
              A Paraphrase after the opera Eugene Onegin [14:59]  
                
              Mordecai Shehori (piano)  
              rec. August 2002, New York (Prokofiev); June 2009, Las Vagas (Glinka-Balakirev, 
              Tchaikovsky); August 1999, New York (Balakirev); February 2009, 
              Las Vegas (Tchaikovsky-Pabst)  
                
              CEMBAL D’AMOUR CD143 [65:09]   
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                  Mordecai Shehori’s Russian album starts the hard way, with a 
                  commanding, fluent and utterly authoritative performance of 
                  Prokofiev’s Seventh Sonata. Of course one can programme things 
                  any way one wants but artists and companies make statements 
                  in the way they line up a miscellaneous programme. In this case, 
                  we go straight for the emotive jugular, and allow the Old School 
                  virtuosity of Islamey and the colouristic charm of the 
                  Tchaikovsky triptych to follow.  
                     
                  The bright recording quality suits Shehori’s sense of projection 
                  very appropriately. He is a master of the sonata’s quixotic 
                  moods, its splenetic moments as well as its more sanguine-melancholic 
                  ones. He avoids the assault course mentality prevalent in some 
                  circles, and also takes a different and fruitfully divergent 
                  approach to that of, say, Richter whose more militant, militaristic 
                  vision is powerfully probing in its own right [I’m citing Parnassus 
                  PACD 96-001/2, a 1958 recording]. Shehori is more intent on 
                  exploring the stases and tentative measures inherent in the 
                  moment, taking a structurally cohesive, wide-spanning control. 
                  The central movement is striking for its reserve and song without 
                  words quality in its opening paragraphs, and also in the slow 
                  build up to its more chiselled aural profile. The return to 
                  the opening feeling is affectingly accomplished. Unleashed and 
                  duly replenished, the finale emerges as a pent up outburst of 
                  brilliantly alive pianism. It ends a performance of excellence. 
                   
                     
                  Lyric but intensely virtuosic Shehori dispatches The Skylark 
                  with an acute ear for the tensions embodied in this vortex pull 
                  between emotive states; marvellous theatrical projection without 
                  any corresponding fakery. The three Tchaikovsky pieces are examples 
                  of refined and indeed refulgent lyric poetry – the Lark 
                  (another one) – as well as the more burnished warmth of the 
                  Romance in F minor. The last of the three serves in fact as 
                  an ‘encore’ to the preceding two; the Dumka, with its sense 
                  of rolling tristesse, has ebullience and style but also a melancholic 
                  trajectory that Shehori never fails to locate but never objectifies. 
                   
                     
                  Islamey receives a traversal of fiery and evocative concentration, 
                  the virtuoso demands co-existing with the alluring colouration 
                  that lend the work so formidable a construction. And then there 
                  is the far more unusual, discographically rare Tchaikovsky-Pabst 
                  Paraphrase after the opera Eugene Onegin. Laced with 
                  refined tracery, delicate trills and also graced by a tumult 
                  of virtuoso demands, and colour, this work demands the absolute 
                  in rhythmic control as much as anything. Shehori brings an immense 
                  sense of weight and dynamism to bear and he copes with some 
                  of its more unremitting challenges with tremendous eloquence. 
                  In that spot where a new material with multiple voices is introduced, 
                  at 3:30, there is an abrupt shift in timing and texture (suddenly 
                  "Seco") that could signal a possible edit or may be 
                  just the result of an extreme angular tonal and rhythmic shift, a 
                  device that apparently Mr. Shehori employs on other occasions 
                  as well.  
                     
                  In any case the Russian album establishes a repertoire-rich 
                  undertaking from Shehori. The recording dates and locations 
                  vary – between Las Vegas and New York – but the performance 
                  level and values never dip. 
                
  
                  Jonathan Woolf 
                
                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                  
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                
                
             
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