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Alexander
SCRIABIN (1872-1915)
Sonatas for piano Nos.1-10
CD 1: Sonatas 1 ,4, 5, 9
CD 2: Sonatas 2, 5, 7, 8, 3
Anatol Ugorski (piano)
rec. November 2007, October 2008, May and July 2009 Studio 2, BR
München. Stereo. DDD
C-AVI MUSIC 8553195 [78:43 + 80:42]
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Alexander SCRIABIN
(1872-1915)
Sonatas for piano Nos.1-10
CD 1: Sonatas 1 ,4, 5, 9
CD 2: Sonatas 2, 5, 7, 8, 3
Anatol Ugorski (piano)
rec. November 2007, October 2008, May and July 2009 Studio 2,
BR München. Stereo. DDD
AVI MUSIC 8553195 [78:43 + 80:42]
For many listeners, the wealth of Scriabin recordings on the
market must be something of a mystery. It's not that the music
is unworthy of this exposure, it clearly is, but more that its
saleability is questionable to say the least. The answer, I
think, lies in the relationships between record labels and their
star pianists. Scriabin is first and foremost a pianist's composer,
a creator of works that separate the men from the boys and,
just as importantly, allow the performer to present unique and
subjective interpretations without going against the spirit
of the music.
All of these features are very much in evidence with Anatol
Ugorski's new recording of the sonatas. Ugorski had a short
but stellar international career in the 1990s, framed by his
moving from Russia to the West in 1992 and his subsequent decision
to give up performing to concentrate on teaching. So what would
it take to lure him back into the studio after an absence of
around ten years? You guessed it. And how are the results? Well,
they are certainly distinctive.
The first thing that struck me about Ugorski's playing is the
sheer dexterity of his technique. Late 50s isn't necessarily
all that old for a pianist, but from the suppleness of the playing
here, you'd think you were listening to a teenager. The interpretation
is a different story, and Ugorski's grasp of this music is clearly
the result of decades of close study.
It would be difficult to defend this recording against accusations
of over-indulgence. Many of the movements are far slower than
you will hear elsewhere, and there are all sorts of pauses,
gaps and elongations that can't in all fairness be described
as Scriabin's own. But I don't hold any of this against Ugorski.
I love the way that he lives for the moment and imbues every
phrase with almost claustrophobic atmosphere. The recording
technology really helps this approach, with the piano placed
in a warm acoustical environment. This is especially evident
in the resonance of the piano upper register - those quiet held
chords washing around inside the lid and refusing to disappear.
The dynamic range of the recording, and of the performance itself
I suspect, is greater than you'll hear on recordings by, for
example, Ashkenazy or Ogdon, which is a real boon for Scriabin's
variegated and complex textures.
The downside is a lack of linear focus. Scriabin's melodies,
especially in the later works, are difficult to follow at the
best of times, but here are often reduced to little more than
frameworks for the harmonic and contrapuntal textures. Such
are Ugorski's priorities and consistency of approach that he
invites the interpretation of this inverted musical hierarchy
as a legitimate performance decision. Whether or not you agree
is another matter.
The ordering of the sonatas is clever, with each disc beginning
in the earlier, more digestible repertoire, and then gradually
moving into the composer's more esoteric later works. That would
be a sensible approach in any box set of the sonatas, but is
particularly valuable here, given the expansive and, yes, indulgent
nature of the readings.
I would normally hesitate to recommend eccentric recordings
of key works to those unfamiliar with them, but in this case
I'm willing to make an exception. He is a real individual, Anatol
Ugorski, and he has produced a left-field recording of music
that, even in more conservative hands, is itself eccentric.
Perhaps that's the point: this is a strange interpretation to
say the least, but with every wayward decision, Ugorski seems
to be getting closer and closer to the spirit of the music.
Add to that the precision of his technique, the sheer athleticism
of his playing and the superior audio quality, and this becomes
an attractive proposition indeed.
Gavin Dixon
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