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Frédéric CHOPIN (1810-1849)
Polonaise in C sharp minor op.26/1 [7:49] (1) Mazurka in A minor
op.67/4 [2:49] (2) Mazurka in C sharp minor op.30/4 [3:47] (3)
Fantaisie in F minor op.49 [12:58] (4) Mazurka in C sharp minor
op.41/1 [4:05] (5) Mazurka in E minor op.41/2 [2:20] (6) Mazurka
in B major op.41/3 [1:23] (7) Mazurka in A flat major op.41/4 [2:07]
(8) Nocturne in F major op.15/1 [4:08] (9) Waltz in A flat op.34/1
[4:48] (10) Nocturne in C minor op.48/1 [6:30] (11) Waltz in A
minor op.34/2 [5:03] (12) Scherzo no.3 in C sharp minor op.39 [7:39]
(13) Waltz in D flat major op.64/2 [1:59] (14) Waltz in C sharp
minor op.64/2 [3:45] (15)
Vera Gornostaeva (piano)
rec. live 22 November 1974 (1, 4, 12), 3 October 1979 (13), 10 November 1981 (5, 7, 9, 10), 6 March 1984 (11, 14, 15), 1989 (2, 3, 6, 8, from a private collection), Great Hall of the Moscow State Conservatoire
LP CLASSICS 1002 [71:04]
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“Discovering a legend”, they call it. The basic thing about
a legend, I always thought, was that everyone knew about it
by name if not up close. Vera Gornostaeva (b. 1929) was a new
one on me, but we all have our blind spots. Prepared to find
the Internet littered with information and comments on a living
legend known to all but me, I duly did my bit of googling. I
only found a Wikipedia article virtually identical to the notes
accompanying this disc, so presumably put up by the same enthusiast,
and some info on the present CD.
Vera Gornostaeva studied at the Moscow State Conservatoire with
Heinrich Neuhaus, who is actually the perfect example of what
I understand by a legend: a name most people know as the famed
teacher of Richter and Gilels, but a pianist whose actual discs
mostly circulate among connoisseurs. She began teaching at the
Moscow State Conservatoire herself in 1959 and had a heavy recital
schedule from the mid-50s through to the mid-90s when she decided
to retire and dedicate herself entirely to teaching and adjudicating
competitions, a career which she still continues.
However. She never joined the communist party and vaunted the
fact publicly, she spoke openly of her religious beliefs and
she associated with people like Pasternak. Back in Stalin’s
days she would have quietly disappeared. In the relatively –
only relatively – benign dictatorships that followed, there
were plenty who got a spell of the Gulag for less than what
she did. These were usually men with sufficiently high reputations
in the West to cause embarrassment to the Soviet government.
Gornostaeva was unknown in the West and just remained so. Blacklisted
for twenty years and thus forbidden to accept engagements abroad,
she was left free to give recitals, up to a hundred a year,
in the farthest-flung corners of the Soviet Union. By the time
the Iron Curtain fell her concert career was – by her own choosing
– at an end. She has nevertheless given master classes in many
countries of the world, and is particularly venerated in Japan,
where she was introduced on the recommendation of Rostropovich.
Gornostaeva apparently recorded quite extensively for Melodiya
in the days of LP. However, the series on LP Classics which
begins with the present issue has another source. A vast number
of live performances were recorded for television and radio,
none of them previously released. By agreement with Gosteleradiofond
a selection is now seeing the light of day.
Artur Rubinstein is alleged to have said, on hearing Richter
for the first time, words to the effect that there was no particular
beauty of tone that struck him, and yet, as the performance
progressed, he found a tear falling down his face. I say alleged
since it has been doubted that he ever said such a thing, and
on the face of it, this would seem an unlikely reaction to Richter.
But it might be your reaction to Gornostaeva. You might find
the first piece on the disc unduly stately for a polonaise,
but then how beautifully turned are the gently answering phrases,
how generously it builds up. You might think the middle section
of this same piece excessively slow, that “meno mosso” doesn’t
mean turning it into a nocturne. But then how ardently it all
sings, it would take a heart of stone not to capitulate.
And so it goes on, really. If she sometimes leaves you doubting
when a piece starts – some of the mazurkas seem initially a
little slow – within a few bars she has you following her every
move. More than with a pianist, I’d compare her with the sort
of singer who, once you’re hooked on their voice, you just can’t
turn a deaf ear, whatever they sing, even however they sing
it. The abiding impression is of a great richness of spirit.
I’ve already used the word generous, but it came to mind continually.
If I’ve given the idea she is inclined to be slow, then the
A flat waltz has wonderful high spirits and the tiny B major
mazurka has its proper verve. However, just to prove that this
is an imperfect world, I thought the scherzo got a humdrum performance
and, once the spell had been broken, the D flat waltz struck
me as sticky in the lyrical sections and the C sharp minor waltz
rather fidgety.
But I’m left in no doubt that this is a pianist we should all
discover. In times of conformity, eccentricity, personality
cults, technical exhibitionism and heaven knows what else, Gornostaeva
offers a free-soaring spirit and a dedication to musical values
that shine like a beacon. The recordings are reasonable for
their date and provenance. I’d dearly like to know what editions
she uses. Variants from my mix of the Paderewski and Henle editions
are numerous, especially dynamics but sometimes notes, including
a fascinating C flat in the polonaise.
Christopher Howell
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