  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
               
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS 
              Sound 
              Samples & Downloads   | 
           
             Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873-1943) 
              Preludes and Melodies  
              Preludes Op. 23 (1903) [32:46]  
              Prelude in F major, Op. 2 (1891) [3:30]  
              Canon in D minor (c. 1890) [1:15] 
              Prelude in E flat minor (1887) [3:06] 
              Melodie in E major (1887) [3:15]  
              Gavotte in D major (1887) [3:26]  
              Prelude in D minor, Op. Posth (1917) [2:53] 
              Fragments, Op. Posth (1917) [2:15]  
              Lilacs, Op. 21 No. 5 (1913) [2:41]  
              Daisies, Op. 38 No. 3 (1922, rev.1940) [2:30] 
              Vocalise, Op. 34 No. 14 arr. Bax (1912) [6:25]  
              Sorochintsy Fair: Hopak (1924) [1:46]  
              Modest MUSSORGSKY, arr. Rachmaninov  
              Liebesleid (1921) [4:33]  
              Fritz KREISLER, arr. Rachmaninov  
              Liebesfreud (1925) [6:45]  
                
              Alessio Bax (piano)  
              rec. 13-16 June 2010, Wyastone Hall, Monmouthshire, UK.  
                
              SIGNUM CLASSICS SIGCD264 [77:06]   
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                Alessio Bax has been on our radar for a while now, with a release 
                  Baroque Reflections well received (see review), 
                  and this is his second solo piano recital disc for Signum Classics, 
                  the first being Bach Transcribed on SIGCD156.  
                   
                  In the booklet notes, Bax writes of Rachmaninov that “one of 
                  my earliest musical memories is listening to him play his own 
                  recordings. For a time, I felt he was totally incapable of wrongdoing 
                  and Rachmaninov became my musical guide.” This recording is 
                  therefore a kind of homage to the great composer/pianist. The 
                  Preludes op.23 are clearly the main draw here, but rather 
                  than follow the current trend by pairing them with the Op. 32 
                  set, Bax also takes on a broad selection of Rachmaninov’s other 
                  studies, etudes, melodies and transcriptions, turning the programme 
                  into a substantial recital which Bax describes as a collection 
                  of ‘visions and landscapes’.  
                   
                  Beautifully recorded, these are performances to savour. From 
                  the outset you can sense Bax’s feelings for this music are deeply 
                  rooted and genuine. He doesn’t over-stretch points of interpretation, 
                  but neither does he by any means deliver straight and characterless 
                  readings. By way of comparison I’ve been listening to Rustem 
                  Hayroudinoff on Chandos CHAN10107, which is another fine and 
                  honestly expressed recording. To my ears, Bax has the more accurately 
                  tuned ear to accompanying textures and secondary voices. Taken 
                  a little faster than Hayroudinoff, Bax creates that miracle 
                  of speed and glorious texture in the famous Prelude Op. 23 
                  no.2, while at the same time realising that maestoso 
                  marking by bringing out the long melodic lines and carefully 
                  layering the dynamics of the rest. To be honest, maestoso 
                  is the last marking you’d have in mind for most pianists in 
                  this piece – that or it is interpreted as slowness in general 
                  which misses the point of those accompanying ostinati, as happens 
                  with Earl Wild on his otherwise good but rather dryly recorded 
                  Chesky recording CD-114.  
                   
                  These points of interpretation and refinement in performance 
                  are strong elements throughout works which often invite a juggernaut 
                  approach. For those of you who nurture an aversion to Rachmaninov 
                  for this reason, Alessio Bax could well be the man to bring 
                  you into the fold. For instance, have a listen to the touch 
                  he gives to all those octaves in that fifth prelude. The world 
                  may already have stopped turning for you in the beauty of sound 
                  and lyricism Bax brings to the previous Prelude Op. 23 no. 
                  4, and the ‘alla marcia’ of this following Prelude Op.23 
                  no.5 could hardly be a bigger contrast, but Bax’s strutting 
                  rhythms also have a touch of the self-aware as well as having 
                  that much needed testosterone – a Matador with a twinkle in 
                  his eye and regrets in his heart.  
                   
                  The opus 23 Preludes are all a delight, and, as if we 
                  needed rewarding for this serious listening experience, Alessio 
                  Bax has selected a number of more or less well known individual 
                  pieces to complete his generous programme. The first five of 
                  these were written when Rachmaninov was a teenager, and what 
                  amounts to a brief chronological survey takes in gems such as 
                  gorgeous Prelude in E flat minor, in which you can hear 
                  the composer’s fingerprint pianistic writing and melodic gift 
                  already established, but still waiting for that unique seed 
                  to grow into genuine individuality, and melodic and harmonic 
                  genius. Craggy and uncompromising expression has emerged by 
                  1917, and the Prelude in D minor, Op. Posth is an enigmatic 
                  tour de force. Another highlight is the famous Vocalise, 
                  arranged by Bax and providing a beautiful vehicle for his sustaining 
                  melodic touch and balance with second voices and harmony. Bax 
                  manages to suggest those chords in the first section, 
                  disguising their attack wonderfully, and creating a marvellously 
                  ethereal atmosphere. This is followed by some highly digestible 
                  encore material: Rachmaninov’s arrangements of Mussorgsky’s 
                  dancing Sorochinsky Fair, and Kreisler’s Liebesleid 
                  and Liebesfreud; salon rabble-rousers played with 
                  perfectly extrovert élan by Bax.  
                   
                  This is a marvellous recording and very easy to recommend. Mike 
                  Hatch’s superb sound engineering in the familiar and much loved 
                  Wyastone Hall acoustic deserves mention and plaudits, as does 
                  Signum’s presentation, with extensive artist’s notes and commentary 
                  on the music by Stuart Isacoff. You may or may not go for the 
                  moody ‘Captain Scarlet’ look given to our soloist for the cover 
                  photo, but don’t be fooled either way – even good looking musicians 
                  can be great artists.  
                   
                  Dominy Clements 
                   
                   
                 
                
                                                                                                                    
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |