Julian FONTANA (1810-1869)
                  Complete Piano Works Volume 3
                  Souvenir de Weber; Pot-pourri sur les motifs d’Oberon de Weber 
                  Op.5 (1843) [8:11]
                  L’Inquiétude Op.1 No.2 from Deux Caprices [3:22]
                  Rhapsodie à la Polka Op.19 [3:05]
                  Douze Morceaux caractéristiques en forme d’Études Op.9 Book 
                  1 [15:11]
                  Lolita; Grande Valse Brillante Op.11 (1846) [6:24]
                  Deuxième Fantaisie Brillante sur les Motifs de Somnambule 
                  de Bellini Op.16 [7:05]
                  
 
                  Philippe Devaux (piano)
                  rec. July 2010, April 2011, Polish Radio Studio S1
                  Includes Appendix CD [5:00] with a performance of Nocturne Op.20 
                  performed by Joanna Lawrynowicz (piano) and the Acte Préalable 
                  2012 catalogue and MP3 samples readable on all computers
                  
 
                  ACTE PRÉALABLE AP0262 [43:22]
                   
                  As I wrote in my review of the second volume in this series 
                  (APO259), this recording is part of Acte Préalable’s ‘Chopin’s 
                  Disciples’ series and promotes the art of his friend, copyist, 
                  negotiator, propagandist Julian Fontana. He was also a composer 
                  in his own right, and clearly a formidable virtuoso, though 
                  it is the association with Chopin that has granted him his greatest 
                  fame. This disc, as with the others in the series, seeks to 
                  rebalance the historical perspective thus long established.
                   
                  This third volume conforms to the programming precepts established 
                  by the earlier two in the series. The Douze Morceaux caractéristiques 
                  en forme d’Études, the last six of which were heard in 
                  volume 2, are completed in this volume where the first six are 
                  presented. Then there are Waltzes, pot-pourri and Fantasies 
                  such are so often to be found in the catalogues of composers 
                  of the mid-century.
                   
                  The Études are seldom without interest, often replete 
                  with exciting melodies, sometimes animated by chordal left hand 
                  incitements. The third of the set is a cantilena, reflective 
                  rather more of German Romanticism than Chopin, one feels. In 
                  fact the influence of Schumann on Fontana is often most pronounced 
                  in slower music, whilst that of Liszt is most obvious in the 
                  more discursively virtuosic drama that is also Fontana’s stock 
                  in trade. Here, though, one also feels a besetting sin of Fontana’s 
                  – he’s often too ‘busy’ a composer, seldom relaxing. The nice 
                  voicings and rapid figuration, of the last of the études demonstrate 
                  that he can restrain over elaboration when he wants to.
                   
                  Elsewhere there are ornamental variations on themes from Oberon—the 
                  preceding volume witnesses his elaborations on Der Freischütz—very 
                  much on stylised lines. L’Inquiétude was his Op.1 and 
                  its constantly shifting patterns are a little unsettled, though 
                  not unattractive. The Rhapsodie à la Polka Op.19 is 
                  prettily generic, whilst Lolita, a Grande Valse Brillante, 
                  is very much School of the Salon, Year of 1846. With the Deuxième 
                  Fantaisie Brillante sur les Motifs de Somnambule de Bellini 
                  we return to operatic pot-pourri, solidly done and quite brief.
                   
                  There is a bonus disc which offers the label’s 2012 catalogue 
                  but also presents the first ever recording of Fontana’s Nocturne 
                  Op.20 in a performance not by the excellent French pianist Philippe 
                  Devaux, but by the equally fine Polish pianist Joanna Lawrynowicz. 
                  It’s a pleasing piece, notable for its simplicity and lack of 
                  flannel.
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf