Nikolai MEDTNER (1880-1951)
Mood Pictures Op.1 [20:43]
Three Improvisations Op.2 [19:27]
Four Pieces Op.4 [11:59]
Three Arabesques Op.7 [10:02]
Three Dithyrambs Op.10 [17:25]
Three Novellen Op.17 [15:09]
Four Lyrical Fragments Op.23 [9:54]
Étude in C minor [2:32]
Three Pieces Op.31 [13:45]
Three Hymns to Toil Op.49 [10:44]
Theme and variations in C sharp minor Op.55 [9:01]
Two Elegies Op.59 [14:58]
Hamish Milne (piano)
rec. Henry Wood Hall, London, UK, 20-22 September 2010, 10-12 March 2011
HYPERION CDA 67851/2 [80:20 + 77:11]
I’d just finished speaking with my son on the phone before I began this
review and he was telling me that he was about to go into a pub in London where
they served 23 real ales … wow! I feel even more fortunate to be reviewing
these two discs which have 38 pieces of real quality on them which I’ll
be able to enjoy any time I like.
Some years ago when I first really discovered Medtner I felt hugely exhilarated
just as I imagine a beachcomber does when he finds something quite unexpected
and of great value. It comes as no surprise to learn that no lesser a pianist-composer
than Rachmaninov said that Medtner alone ‘from the very beginning, published
works that it would be hard for him to equal in later life’.
It is truly amazing to hear the first few notes of Prolog from his opus
one which he began composing when only 15 and which are not only fresh but perfectly
formed, sounding as if it comes from someone who had already mastered his craft
even at that early stage. As my mother-in-law is fond of saying “he must
have been here before!” This is followed by a fantastic tune Allegro
con impeto, lasting a mere couple of minutes. That’s what I particularly
like and admire about Medtner: his ability to say so much in such tiny frameworks.
These are the same reasons I love Satie and other miniaturists’ skill
in economy, for they prove conclusively that less is more. Medtner also
magically creates musical worlds that transport you to another plane as he does
with his Andante from the first set. He loves having notes cascade so
beautifully. You have to marvel at the amount of invention he could cram into
a piece such as the last of this set that lasts a mere minute and a half. Published
a year later in 1904 his opus two Three Improvisations, contain some
of the longest of his short pieces.The first of them tells of the water nymph
famously written about by Dvořák in Rusalka and by Ravel
in Ondine;it was a theme Medtner returned to more than once. These
still short pieces by any normal standards show the breadth of Medtner’s
invention when he allows himself more time to explore themes. The second, entitled
Memories of a ball, transport us back to a bygone age of elegance glimpsed
so often in the best costume dramas. The last of the three, Scherzo infernale
tells of the “mischievous creatures of Russian folklore” rather
“than of the hell and damnation of Liszt’s ‘Mephisto’
pieces” as Hamish Milne explains in his excellent booklet notes.
What is truly incredible about Medtner’s writing is that his economy doesn’t
equate to trifles that one might expect from lesser composers of his era. They
dashed off popular little tunes to be played at home by those wealthy enough
to buy pianos in the early years of the 20th century when owning
a piano for such people was de rigueur. These short works encompass whole
worlds and emerge fully formed with nothing left to be added.
It was fascinating reading Hamish Milne’s notes as I listened. His explanations
of the music help to increase the enjoyment. I found this to be the case especially
with the last of the Four Pieces in which Medtner explores his German
heritage so effectively. Milne explains its complexity which is contained within
its mere two and a half minutes in such a way that only makes me regret even
more my inability to read music or play the piano, the better to understand
such wonderful music ... in my next life. Then we come to his Three Arabesques
which, as Hamish Milne explains, were not written as such but the publisher
“bundled” the first entitled Ein Idyll together with two
pieces each entitled Tragoedie-Fragment “under the absurdly incongruous
title Arabesques”. That’s how they are known today. The degree
of incongruity is evident as the lilting sounds of Ein Idyll fade from
its “gentle melancholy” to the weighty and serious world described
in the first of the Tragoedie. The second is even more disturbed and
tempestuous and a far cry from anything bearing the title Idyll. However,
whether we are listening to a musical description of bliss or of sadness and
despair Medtner is able in a mere couple of minutes to encapsulate such feelings
so brilliantly.
The first of this two disc set is rounded off with Drei Dithyramben
about which meaning there is a certain unresolved opinion. It could be connected
to a general paean to the gods. There is a stately nature to these pieces. They
are extremely serious in their treatment, not to say portentous, which note
is struck at the start of the first with its four gong-like strokes; not for
nothing is it marked Maestoso severamente. The second and longest is
similarly imbued with a commanding grandeur while the third is like a postscript
with a much lighter tone to it.
Disc two is similarly packed with wondrous things, all, like disc one, in the
chronological order of their composition. All confirm Medtner’s complete
mastery of the piano miniature in which a whole world of feeling can be portrayed
in the shortest imaginable time frame. From the three Novellen, through
the Four Lyrical Fragments and the solitary Étude in C minor,
written as a contribution to a 1916 collection in aid of war victims, we are
continuously reminded of this composer’s incredible inventiveness and
ability to make every note tell with neither a note too many or too few. Whether
he is expressing joy or sadness, pride or regret he gets his message across
perfectly. A particular example is the second of his Trois morceaux which
he dedicated to a gifted composer, Alexei Stanchinsky who tragically drowned
in 1914 at only 26 and who was thought of as a genius in the making. This is
both a tribute to an artist as well as an expression of sadness at the death
of a talented young man and is expressed so eloquently that it is truly affecting.
The third of these pieces is a Skazka or fairytale, a form he was especially
fond of and which he wrote no less than 34, all of which can be heard on another
excellent Hyperion 2 disc set from Hamish Milne (CDA67491/2).
The Drei Hymnen an die Arbeit, the title of which no one seems to have
found the inspiration for, begins with an absolutely beautiful piece marked
Allegro molto tranquillo which it most certainly is. All three were responded
to in a one word telegram from Rachmaninov ‘Superb’. Hamish Milne
may describe it as an ‘irrelevant digression’ but I loved his story
that Medtner so often finished off his piano practise with a C major cadence
that his dog came to recognise it and would show that he was ready to be taken
for a walk upon hearing it! The Theme and Variations in C sharp minor
at 9 minutes is the longest piece on these 2 CDs. It’s nice to hear what
Medtner could do when he allowed himself more time as he takes his little minuet
on an excursion of dazzlingly virtuosic proportions.
The final offering on the second of these generously packed discs is his very
last solo piano piece, Zwei Elegien op.59. His biographer, Barrie Martyn
rates these as being ‘among the composer’s finest creations’.
The second of them I find particularly fine. Nevertheless my response to all
of Medtner’s piano music is such that I can truthfully say that my favourite
piece is usually whichever I’m listening to at the time. Having said that
I must confess to adoration of his Forgotten Melodies which were my introduction
to this brilliant composer’s works. However, I absolutely agree with Hamish
Milne’s closing remarks in his booklet notes in which he says that should
those devotees of Medtner’s music neglect the works on this set because
they are not considered of such import as the major works - the Sonatas and
Skazki or the three piano concertos, then ‘we shall be a lot poorer
for it’ - how true! As Hamish Milne also points out Medtner did die a
disappointed man for whom widespread recognition and appreciation still eluded
him. Those of us who adore his music and are convinced that ‘his day will
come’ have every reason to be optimistic that that day is not far off.
Sets such as this will be further help in ensuring its speedy arrival. Hamish
Milne has done a superb job in helping that process with superlative recordings
of lasting value.
Steve Arloff
These short works encompass whole worlds and emerge fully formed with nothing
left to be added.