|
|
CD: MDT
AmazonUK
AmazonUS
|
Classical Accordion
Arne NORDHEIM (1931–2010)
Flashing (1985) [7:21]
Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
*Overture in the French Style, BWV 831 [7:04]
Luciano BERIO (1925-2003)
Sequenza XIII 'Chanson' (1995) [9:15]
Domenico SCARLATTI (1685-1757)
*Sonata in D minor, K.77 [5:09]
*Sonata in D, K.33 [3:12]
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
*12 Variations on 'Ah, Vous Dirai-je, Maman' [8:45]
Alfred SCHNITTKE (1934-1998)
*Revis Fairy Tale [10:19]
Yuji TAKAHASHI (b.1938)
Like a Water Buffalo (1985) [10:32]
Ástor PIAZZOLLA (1921–1992)
+Asleep [from: Five Tango Sensations (1989)] [6:51]
* arrangements
Ksenija Sidorova (accordion)
+Sacconi Quartet
rec. Music Room, Champs Hill, Sussex, 13-15 April, 2010; 7 June
2010 [Piazzolla]; 22 January 2011 [Takahashi, 1st movement]. DDD
CHAMPS HILL RECORDS CHRCD 019 [68:30]
|
|
This is young Latvian accordionist Ksenija Sidorova's debut
CD. The liner notes say, quite rightly, that the accordion is
"an under-exploited resource in Western classical music".
Sidorova's great enthusiasm for her instrument, which she wants
to move away from its folk-music associations, comes across
very strongly not only in her media interviews but more importantly
in her performances in this recital.
The five pieces that have been transcribed for accordion may
on the face of it be little more than 'lollipops', but they
do show how splendidly a skilled accordionist like Sidorova
is able to take almost any material and make it sound as if
it was originally composed for this incredibly applicative and
versatile instrument. Someone hearing, for example, Bach's Overture
in the French Style BWV 831 for the first time played on
the intended harpsichord may well be able to ascribe it to Bach,
but arranged for accordion it frequently sounds like a folk
piece which, though its Frenchness may be gainsaid, might have
its beginnings in any number of periods or places. Even Mozart's
Variations on a tune known to a dozen generations of
children across Europe sounds as if it might have originated
on the accordion. However, apart from the typically polystylistic
Schnittke suite, the booklet does not indicate who made the
transcriptions, and that is rather a pity, because whether it
was Sidorova or someone else, the arranger deserves at least
some credit for this musical beguilement.
As to the original works for accordion (or bandoneón, in Piazzolla's
case), it may come as a surprise to many that an uncompromising
modernist like Luciano Berio wrote a work for an instrument
with such a whimsical reputation, all the more so to discover
that the piece in question is one of his Sequenze! As
it happens, Sequenza XIII has been recorded a few times,
by Joseph Petric on Naxos, for example - see review.
The subtitle 'Chanson' comes from Berio's imagination - he had
in mind "the accompanied melodies of trips to the country
and the songs of the working class, of night clubs, of Argentinean
tangos and of jazz." His description gives some idea of
the - for Berio - popular idiom, and it is without doubt one
of his most instantly appealing works.
Arne Nordheim was also a modernist, though he has more accordion
'previous' than Berio - Flashing, in fact, is based on
the cadenza of his 1975 accordion concerto Spur. If any
criticism can be made of Sidorova's varied programme, it is
the placing of Nordheim's piece at the top of it: not that Flashing
is a forbidding work, but it does not yield up its secrets with
any special urgency and perhaps suggests a harder-going recital
for the non-specialist listener than it really is.
Like renowned Japanese accordionist Mie Miki - see enthusiastic
review
of the latter's recent CD release on BIS (CD-1804) - Ksenija
Sidorova is a fantastic player, having technique and passion
in abundance. If Sidorova is Latvia's answer to Miki, her inclusion
of Yuji Takahashi's reflective Like a Water Buffalo is a tribute:
Takahashi wrote this piece for Miki, who recorded it a decade
ago for BIS - see review
for details. The curious title comes from a short poem by
Australian poet Wendy Poussard, which Sidorova reads out as
a preface to the multi-faceted music.
By way of an encore, or 'bonus track' as the CD says quaintly,
the final piece, the first movement of Piazzolla's Five Tango
Sensations, features a first and last appearance for the
Sacconi Quartet, taking the place of Piazzolla's original dedicatees,
the Kronos Quartet. Even though it relies heavily on an ostinato,
this piece is indeed a sensation, gloriously mournful and haunting,
and an inspired way to bring this impressive debut disc to an
end.
The CD is beautifully recorded, although the microphones might
have been better placed a little further back from Sidorova
- the unavoidable clacking of the buttons is quite noisy at
times. The attractive booklet is informative and very cleanly
laid out.
This is, in sum, an alluring disc that offers a fine introduction
to Sidorova's already beautifully toned musicianship.
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk
|
|