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             Karl WEIGL (1881-1949) 
               
              Isle of the Dead (1903) [13.12]  
              Pictures and Tales, Op.2 (1909) [13.03]  
              Night Fantasies, Op.13 (1911) [21.35]  
              Dance of the Furies (1937-8) [5.21]  
              Six Fantasies (1942) [25.30]  
                
              Joseph Banowetz (piano)  
              rec. Skywalker Sound, Marin County, California, 9-10 November, 18 
              December 2009  
                
              NAXOS 8.572423 [78.49] 
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                Karl Weigl was yet another of the many European composers who 
                  sought refuge in America during the Nazi era. He had begun his 
                  career in Vienna as a pianist and as a conductor under Mahler, 
                  but after a time started to focus on large-scale orchestral 
                  canvases. He does not appear to have been happy in exile, and 
                  was largely neglected as a composer, turning again to smaller-scale 
                  pieces which had more chance of performance. However he wrote 
                  two later symphonies (see review), and these have recently been recorded by the 
                  Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra under Thomas Sanderling for 
                  BIS. The Fifth Symphony, subtitled Apocalyptic, 
                  is a real surprise (see review) - it begins with the sound of the orchestra tuning up and only 
                  gradually does the thematic material emerge from this early 
                  example of ‘free music’. The two symphonies are 
                  otherwise thoroughly romantic works, for all the world as if 
                  the Second Viennese School had never existed.  
                     
                  His piano music, on the other hand, is far less ambitious. The 
                  pieces here are all either early or late works, and seem to 
                  have been intended largely for Weigl’s own performances 
                  as a recitalist. The disc opens with the charming Six Fantasies 
                  which he originally wrote for occasional recitals or broadcasts 
                  in America but then it does not seem that any public performances 
                  ever actually materialised. They are pretty lightweight trifles, 
                  designed clearly as crowd-pleasers pure and simple. Nor are 
                  they really virtuoso pieces; they could indeed have been written 
                  a hundred years earlier, and would not have turned heads even 
                  then. Only the final movement, subtitled Halloween, generates 
                  any real sense of excitement; this piece makes more demands 
                  on the pianist, which Banowetz handles with aplomb and a nice 
                  lightness of touch.  
                     
                  Weigl appears to have been the first composer to have taken 
                  inspiration from Böcklin’s famous painting of the 
                  Totinsel, before either Reger (in his beautiful Four 
                  Böcklin Pictures) or Rachmaninov in his large-scale 
                  symphonic poem. However Weigl never published his score - he 
                  seems to have regarded it as a piece of juvenilia - and 
                  the performance here is claimed, amazingly enough, to be the 
                  first one ever given. It is a nicely atmospheric piece reflecting 
                  its subject, and shows no signs of immaturity. That said, it 
                  is rather over-long for its content, and the limited tone-colour 
                  of the piano cannot begin to compete with its orchestral rivals. 
                  It ends very inconclusively - was this intentional, or did Weigl 
                  simply leave the piece unfinished?  
                     
                  The six pieces which make up the Bilder und Geschichten 
                  take their titles from various children’s rhymes and stories, 
                  and have a certain kinship to Schumann’s Kinderszenen. 
                  These are again very straightforward pieces, although they would 
                  be too complex for most children to play. Even the movement 
                  Sleeping Beauty’s grave is very lightweight, indeed 
                  almost frisky. The Tanz der Erinnyen was written just 
                  before Weigl left for America, and he afterwards seems to have 
                  forgotten it because he never performed or published it; it 
                  was not performed until 1970. It is quite a virtuoso piece, 
                  and has the implication of a gesture of defiance to the inhospitable 
                  Europe that he was leaving behind.  
                     
                  The Nachtphantasien on the other hand were taken up by 
                  several pianists, although Weigl himself only ever performed 
                  individual movements in a simplified version for two pianos. 
                  Perhaps his technique was simply not up to it - which might 
                  also explain the relatively modest demands made on the pianist 
                  in the works that he did compose for his own recitals. These 
                  are the best works on this disc, moody and reflective with a 
                  nice line in stormy passion; the first movement contains a brief 
                  passage (at 2.05) which anticipates the melody Prokofiev would 
                  later use in his lament in Alexander Nevsky. The later 
                  pieces are rather less impressive, reminiscent of Rachmaninov 
                  but without the same sheer force of personality.  
                     
                  Listeners who wish to make the acquaintance of Weigl would be 
                  served far better by listening to one of the recordings of the 
                  symphonies as an initial introduction to the work of an unfairly 
                  neglected composer. The piano pieces included here help to round 
                  out our impressions of one of the last of the late romantics, 
                  but they do not give a rounded picture of a composer whose inspiration 
                  seems to have worked better on a larger scale. Banowetz however 
                  should be congratulated on his continuing willingness to explore 
                  the fringes of the repertory, and gives nicely intimate performances 
                  in well-rounded sound. None of the music here over-taxes his 
                  abilities, but it is nevertheless nice to make its acquaintance. 
                     
                   
                  Paul Corfield Godfrey  
                     
                   
                   
                 
                
                                                                                                                                                  
                
                 
                 
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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