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             Dancing on Ivory: Romantic Transcriptions for 
              Piano 
              Percy GRAINGER (1882-1961) 
              Ramble on the Last Love-Duet from Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier 
              [5:55] 
              George GERSHWIN (1898-1937) 
              Love Walked In (transcribed by Percy Grainger) [3:20] 
              Earl WILD (1915-2010) 
              Concert Etude No 4, on Gershwin’s ‘Embraceable You’ [2:49] 
              Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750) 
              Chaconne in D minor, BWV1004 (transcribed by Ferruccio Busoni) [13:30] 
              Christoph Willibald von GLÜCK 
              (1714-1787) 
              Melody from Orpheus (transcribed by Abram Chasins) [4:08] 
              Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873-1943) 
              Vocalise (transcribed by Zoltán Kocsis) [5:12] 
              Isaac ALBÉNIZ (1860-1909) 
              Tango in D, Op 165 No 2 (transcribed by Leopold Godowsky) [3:11] 
              Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921) 
              The Swan (transcribed freely by Leopold Godowsky) [2:53] 
              Johann STRAUSS Jr (1825-1899) 
              Tritsch-Tratsch Polka, Op 214 (transcribed by György Cziffra) [4:01] 
              Adolf SCHULZ-EVLER (1860-1909) 
              Arabesques on themes from On the Beautiful Blue Danube 
              [10:17] 
                
              Jue Wang (piano) 
              rec. June 2011, Greenfield Recital Hall, Manhattan School of Music, 
              New York 
                
              MSR CLASSICS MS 1404 [55:10] 
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In a way these romantic transcriptions make the perfect debut 
                  recital: they combine the familiar with the fresh, the new with 
                  the old, and the poetic with the virtuosic. Jue Wang gets an 
                  hour-long playground to showcase his expressive talents, technical 
                  wizardry and cleverness in building a compelling program. The 
                  CD fires on all cylinders. 
                    
                  Wang leads off with three light-hearted appetizers: Percy Grainger’s 
                  charming, very free “ramble” on “the Last Love-Duet in Der 
                  Rosenkavalier”, and then his similarly free ramble on Gershwin’s 
                  “Love Walked In”. Wang’s especially delightful in the jazzed-up 
                  Earl Wild étude on Gershwin’s “Embraceable You”, a performance 
                  simply dripping in charisma. Next we have a Serious Staple of 
                  the repertoire: Busoni’s transcription of the Bach chaconne 
                  (that chaconne). It opens with the coldness of pealing 
                  bells, but the coldness is a careful choice, demonstrated by 
                  the way Wang shades every single subsequent variation, from 
                  aching loss to brutal power to (at 4:41) playing of speed and, 
                  somehow, frightened lightness. It’s a perfect balance 
                  which brought these ears great joy. The ending isn’t quite as 
                  devastating as some I’ve heard, but it’s certainly a noteworthy 
                  account, especially from a pianist this young (b. March 1984). 
                    
                  The perfect follow-up is a tender reading of a melody from Gluck’s 
                  Orpheus, in a plaintive transcription by Abram Chasins. 
                  Then we get the marvelous Zoltán Kocsis rendering of Rachmaninov’s 
                  Vocalise. Although there are a few slight lapses in 
                  tonal control, Wang’s ability to turn a soft phrase ever softer 
                  at times left me sighing with contentment. That skill returns 
                  (after an Albéniz/Godowsky tango) in Godowsky’s heavily filigreed 
                  rendering of “The Swan”, where Wang makes sense of all the decorative 
                  runs while preserving the arc of the original melody. Still, 
                  this transcription has nothing on the tenderness of a reading 
                  by a good cellist. 
                    
                  We end with two tracks by Johann Strauss Jr.: the Tritsch-Tratsch 
                  Polka, made into a madcap pianistic stomping-ground by 
                  the ultimate madcap pianistic stomper, Cziffra. There’s also 
                  the free fantasy on themes from On the Beautiful Blue Danube 
                  by a certain Adolf Schulz-Evler. Cziffra’s stomp is simply zany 
                  from beginning to end, the kind of thing you’d expect from Marc-André 
                  Hamelin, but Schulz-Evler is if anything even more audacious. 
                  The writing for the very highest keys at the start is so complex 
                  even Wang can’t hit all the notes. This last work is also present 
                  on Piers Lane’s Hyperion Helios (CDH55238) recital of ‘Virtuoso 
                  Strauss Transcriptions’, where even his formidable fingers take 
                  40 more seconds than Wang to blitz through all the virtuoso 
                  passages. The list of pianists who have tackled this work is 
                  an honor-roll of virtuosi: Hamelin, Byron Janis, Josef Lhévinne, 
                  Jorge Bolet and Earl Wild. Lhévinne barreled through the piece 
                  at unbelievable speeds which Wang and Piers Lane don’t try to 
                  replicate. Wang’s fingers, not always as steady as Lane’s in 
                  the opening minute, opt for a middle ground between sheer virtuosity 
                  and soft-shoe treatment of the tunes. Hyperion refers to the 
                  transcriber not as Adolf but Andrei; he was born in Poland and 
                  taught by Carl Tausig in Germany. 
                    
                  Jue Wang is one to watch, then. He has the technique and is 
                  working on tenderness to match; he has the ability to dispatch 
                  any difficulty which we expect from any young pianist, and the 
                  ability to capture a work’s sensibility which we expect only 
                  from the best. There is room for growth here, both in the sonics, 
                  which accurately capture the homey acoustic of American conservatory 
                  recital halls, and in Wang’s occasional and very slight mishandling 
                  of the tenderest phrases (see “The Swan”). These are nitpicks, 
                  and the adventurousness of the program here is a very good sign 
                  indeed. I enjoyed this CD a great deal and am excited to see 
                  what this pianist will bring us next. 
                    
                  Brian Reinhart 
                    
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                 
                 
                 
                 
                 
             
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