Fritz von BOSE (1865-1945)
Suite Nr. 2 op. 20 (pub. 1928) [18:17]
Drei Klavierstücke op. 10 (1913) [15:12]
Elegie op. 21/1 [4:59]
Thema und Variationen op. 17 (pub. 1922) [17:20]
Suite Nr. 1 op. 9 (pub. 1913) [21:35]
Alexandra Oehler (piano)
rec. MDR Leipzig, Springerstrasse 16-20 July, 12-14 November 2001
CPO 777 201-2 [78:20]
Fritz von Bose taught piano at the Leipzig Conservatory from 1838 to 1932, and
the remarkable span of his meant he was old enough to have met Brahms and performed
with Clara Schumann and Joseph Joachim. His teachers included Carl Reinecke,
who apparently regarded him as his favourite student. It is hardly surprising
then, to discover that von Bose’s work inhabits the world of conservative
Romanticism rather than entering into any kind of avant-garde modernity, and
he was known as the “Leipzig Brahms” for good reasons.
Thank heavens it isn’t a requirement of every composer working in the
20th century to be experimental or revolutionary, and this celebration
of Fritz von Bose’s work show his voice to have been that of a gifted
composer for his instrument. The Suite No.2 Op.20 is a middle period
work, with trademark chromatic lines here and there, but with considerable melodic
charm and what the booklet notes allude to as “Mendelssohnian lightness.”
The Three Piano Pieces Op. 10 have plenty of that Brahmsian richness
in the piano textures and harmonies, while the Elegy Op. 21/1 is a more
introspective statement which has something of a whiff of romantic film music
about it.
By far the most extended single movement here is the Theme and Variations
Op.17, in which the composer flexes his creative and pianistic muscles furthest.
A funereal theme with some nice scrunchy dissonances is followed by eleven variations
which move inexorably through a variety of largely elegiac moods towards a darkly
triumphal finale. The programme concludes with the Suite No.1 Op.9, whose
individual movements are stylised dance forms sandwiched between an elegantly
lyrical Prelude and a superbly dramatic closing Finale.
If you were wondering what happened to the legacy of Brahms in late 19th
and early 20th century piano music then Fritz von Bose can supply
some answers to your question. His pieces are relatively undemanding, but nonetheless
enjoyable in a retrospective kind of way. The music is not effusively virtuosic
or heavily Germanic in the “New German” Wagnerian sense, harking
back as it does to the genial warmth of Mendelssohn and the pianistic palette
of Brahms. If it seems strange and anachronistic to think of such music being
created long after the musical world had been turned on its head by Schoenberg
and Stravinsky, remember that von Bose inherited the conservative line of Carl
Reinecke who inhabited similar early Romantic sensibilities at the same time
that Mahler and Rachmaninov were flourishing. Alexandra Oehler’s performances
of these works are very fine, and the MDR recording is highly serviceable if
not particularly exciting.
Dominy Clements
Intriguing Brahmsian left-overs.