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            Sergei BORTKIEWICZ 
              (1877-1952)   
              Piano Works - volume 4  
              Piano Sonata no.2, op.60 (1942) [25:57]  
              Aus Meiner Kindheit, op.14 (1911) [18:39]  
              Ten Preludes, op.15 (1911) [30:06]  
                
              Jouni Somero (piano)  
              rec. Kuusaa Hall, Kuusankoski, Finland, 6-7 November 2008. DDD  
                
              FINNCONCERT FCRCD 9730 [74:47]   
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                  Originally released in 2010, this is the fourth of a projected 
                  eight volumes from Finnish label FinnConcert of Bortkiewicz's 
                  complete music for piano as performed by Finnish soloist Jouni 
                  Somero. The first volume was released in 2006 (FCRCD-9714), 
                  the second in 2008 (FCRCD-9719), the third in 2009 (FCRCD-9723), 
                  all highly commendable.  
                     
                  Bortkiewicz was born in the Ukraine, at that time part of the 
                  Russian Empire. In 1925 he acquired Austrian nationality, and 
                  spent the last part of his life in Vienna. His parents and surname 
                  are Polish however, and it is those roots that generally stand 
                  out in his music. Bortkiewicz published around forty works for 
                  solo piano, of which about half a dozen remain lost. His main 
                  works include two Sonatas and several sets of Preludes, as well 
                  as Mazurkas, Etudes, Waltzes and a Ballade.  
                     
                  The premiere recordings of many of Bortkiewicz's piano pieces 
                  were given by Klaas Trapman, either on Erasmus (WVH 271-272) 
                  or Nederlands Muziekinstituut ('Pianoworks' vols. 1, 2, 3, 2002-2006), 
                  and others by Stephen Coombs (Hyperion CDD22054, 2008 - reissue 
                  of two previous discs), Cyprien Katsaris (Piano 21 P21 004, 
                  2001) and Pierre Huybregts (Centaur CRC 2096, 1991). Bortkiewicz 
                  scholar and pianist Bhagwan Thadani also made a series of self-published 
                  recordings, details of which can be found here. 
                   
                     
                  The three works on this CD bring to sixteen the number of opuses 
                  covered so far in this splendid series by FinnConcert. The first 
                  two volumes revealed Bortkiewicz to be the true heir of Chopin, 
                  as the titles listed above suggest. Volume 3, on the other hand, 
                  showed lighter aspects of Bortkiewicz's cosmopolitanism, with 
                  works more Russian, German, Italian or multinational in nature. 
                   
                     
                  Volume 3 also brought Bortkiewicz's early First Piano Sonata, 
                  full of dazzling virtuosity and dramatic intensity from the 
                  first bars to the final, alongside trademark beautiful melodies 
                  and luscious harmonies, as well as the timeless sensuousness 
                  of the slow movement. After previously referring to the First 
                  as a "magnificent Sonata", Somero describes the Second 
                  as his own personal favourite among Bortkiewicz's piano works, 
                  and it is easy to hear why - it is both utterly conservative 
                  and utterly delectable. The big chord rumbustiousness of the 
                  first movement gives way to a catchy, rubato-rich allegretto, 
                  whilst a lilting, light-fingered, yet very heartfelt slow movement 
                  leads into an exciting, uplifting finale. There are borrowings 
                  from and reminiscences of Rachmaninov, Chopin, Grieg, Alkan 
                  and Skriabin throughout, but Bortkiewicz still manages to affirm 
                  his own originality. Though he gave the premiere in 1942, the 
                  work was only published in 1995 after considerable detective 
                  work on the part of Bhagwan Thadani, as he explains in his essay 
                  at the link given above.  
                     
                  The remaining two works take the listener back to an early phase 
                  of Bortkiewicz's career, shortly after the First Sonata. Aus 
                  Meiner Kindheit ('From My Childhood') is a sort of teenage 
                  version of Schumann's Kinderszenen, a suite of six short 
                  scenes in more or less chronological order, from the warmth 
                  of 'What the Nurse Sang' to the unsettling shadows of 'The Dark 
                  Room' and the mock-suavity of 'The Dancing Lesson', from the 
                  sweet 'First Love', with its presumably deliberate allusions 
                  to Grieg's best-loved song, to the inevitable 'First Sorrow', 
                  and finally the grand - grandiose - plans of 'When I am a Man'. 
                  The Ten Etudes op.15, the second of six sets Bortkiewicz wrote 
                  across his career, are inventive, demanding, often profound, 
                  always entertaining pieces in a variety of keys, that hark back 
                  to the composer's Polish roots and Chopin.  
                     
                  According to the FinnConcert website - now at fcrecords.fi, 
                  rather than the finnconcert.fi indicated on the back inlay - 
                  Jouni Somero has given more than 2,400 concerts or recitals 
                  all over the world, and has made more than sixty recordings. 
                  On this disc as previously, Somero plays Bortkiewicz's music 
                  with conviction and nimble fingers. His beefy style still seems 
                  better suited to loud music than delicate pieces, but with each 
                  new recording he better approximates the right kind of champion 
                  for Bortkiewicz's music, as he demonstrates in some of the gentler 
                  Etudes.  
                     
                  After a dip in volume 3, recording quality is good, ditto editing. 
                  The CD booklet is again pro forma, with biographical 
                  notes of composer and pianist virtually identical to those in 
                  all previous volumes. Somero's Finnish original still provides 
                  extra biographical notes, but as in volume 3 there is now a 
                  translation of Somero's description of the works he plays, though 
                  so brief as to be almost pointless. The typos in the English 
                  from volumes 1-3 have still not been corrected - nothing has 
                  been done, for example, about the instance in which the composer's 
                  name is spelt 'Bortkiwicz'.  
                     
                  On balance, this is another quality disc, and no pianophile 
                  should be without Bortkiewicz's Piano Sonatas or his sets of 
                  Etudes.  
                     
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                     
                 
                
                
                  
                  
                
                 
             
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