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Pavane
Maurice RAVEL (1875-1937)
Pavane pour une infante défunte [5:24]
Gabriel FAURÉ (1845-1924)
Après un rêve, Op. 7 No. 1 [3:13]
Élégie, Op. 24 [7:03]
Richard DUBUGNON (b.1968)
Incantatio, Op. 12b [15:05]
Gabriel FAURÉ
Romance, Op. 69 [3:39]
Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918)
Clair de lune [4:06]
Richard DUBUGNON
Lied, Op. 44b [5:50]
Claude DEBUSSY
La fille aux cheveux de lin [2:38]
Gabriel FAURÉ
Pavane, Op 50 [5:47]
Maxim Rysanov (viola); Ashley Wass (piano)
rec. December 2011, Potton Hall, Saxmundham, Suffolk, UK
BIS BIS-SACD-1773
[52:41]
Maxim Rysanov is one of our best violists, with a pure rich instrumental
tone and great expressive ability. I love his CD of three Bach cello
suites in arrangements, and I like this one too: French impressionist
music arranged for viola and piano. We have Debussy, Ravel, and Fauré,
plus their spiritual descendant, maybe, in Richard Dubugnon (b. 1968).
Everything here is in arrangement. The Ravel Pavane pour une infante
défunte sets the disc’s tone-lyrical but gently melancholy-and
will be followed by, among others, Fauré’s Élégie,
Pavane and Romance, and Debussy’s omnipresent Clair
de lune and La fille aux cheveux de lin. Some arrangements
are more successful than others: Fauré’s Pavane
comes off especially well, and the girl with the flaxen hair is depicted
with really fantastic subtlety. On the other hand, I wonder if Rysanov’s
own arrangement of the Fauré Elegy doesn’t start
off in too high a register. It’s still good.
Then there’s Richard Dubugnon, who has contributed two substantial
pieces to the program in arrangements made especially for Maxim Rysanov.
Incantatio, a three-movement work spanning fifteen minutes and
drawing inspiration from paranormal/psychic rituals (!), is a stylistic
odd man out on the CD, more percussive and stubborn than the rest of
the music here. It can get, if this isn’t a weird word to use,
scratchy. It’s never hard or less than intriguing, but I don’t
know that it belongs with Clair de lune, necessarily. On the
other hand, Dubugnon’s Lied does fit in splendidly, and
its six-minute arc really does feel like a worthy successor to the other
music here.
So I can congratulate Rysanov for his excellent playing, Dubugnon for
at least one really excellent piece, and BIS for once again creating
an exciting program blending old and new. By the way, Did you catch
last year’s Fredrik Ullén piano recital from BIS, half
Liszt and half Messiaen? I have two more prizes to hand out: most and
least valuable player.
The least valuable player is the cover designer. I don’t understand
it: some of the label’s CDs have among the most beautiful, stylish
covers in the business. Their new Dvorák cello recital, Silent
Woods, is gorgeously appointed with smart typesetting and a haunting
photo of, well, silent woods. The Liszt/Messiaen recital has one of
my favorite covers, too, and so does lutenist Jakob Lindberg’s
latest CD. Then every so often they do something like this, which is
hideous in every particular: the photograph of a sleeping or possibly
comatose Max Rysanov, the way the photo has been cut and pasted onto
an all-white background using Photoshop, the wacky mismatched fonts,
the fading pink title. I feel bad for the performers.
That brings me to the most valuable player: pianist Ashley Wass.
His contributions are simply phenomenal, with a softness of touch which
makes one forget the piano is percussive. Wass’s sensitivity and
luminous but slightly understated tone are enough to make me want to
learn a stringed instrument so he can accompany me too. As a soloist
rather than accompanist, Wass is the first-ever artist with an exclusive
contract on Naxos. I hope Naxos is reading this: your Debussy, Fauré
and Ravel piano cycles are out-of-date and not especially loved; Ashley
Wass is the perfect man for the job. What I wouldn’t give to hear
him play La plus que lente …
In the meantime, this is a good enough album that you should not at
all judge by its cover. The artists are what make this worth having.
Brian Reinhart
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