The booklet quotes Pierre Monteux, the conductor of the first performance 
            of 
The Rite of Spring, as stating “that to hear the work 
            without its orchestral colour is to lose one of its main attractions.” 
            In fact, if I recall correctly, Monteux was describing - in his sleeve 
            notes for his LP recording of the work for RCA - how Stravinsky had 
            originally played the work at the piano for Diaghilev and himself, 
            and that as the demonstration had continued he had become more and 
            more convinced that Stravinsky was mad. If the great conductor felt 
            that way about 
The Rite of Spring shorn of its instrumental 
            colour, surely that must mean that for modern listeners any attempt 
            to experience the work in the same way is doomed to failure. 
              
            Well, not entirely. We now know, as Monteux did not at that time, 
            how 
The Rite sounds with a full orchestra playing it; and we 
            can supply from our own memories of the score the colour that a piano 
            reduction fails to supply. In addition, there are advantages to hearing 
            the work in this way. The percussive piano provides a rhythmic drive 
            that the full orchestra blunts. We can hear details of the counterpoint 
            which can be smothered under the layers of instrumental colour. For 
            this reason it is valuable - on occasion - to hear Stravinsky’s 
            ballet unadorned. The two players here do a good job, giving us detail 
            and force by turns. 
              
            In the same way it is easy to assume that the 
Rapsodie espagnole 
            - correctly so spelled in the booklet notes, but mis-spelt as 
            
Rhapsodie in the track-listings - must inevitably suffer without 
            Ravel’s masterly application of orchestral colour. In fact the 
            piano version is the original of the score, composed the year before 
            his own orchestration. Ravel composed a great many of his works in 
            this way, and although we are generally more familiar with 
La Valse, 
            
Le tombeau de Couperin, 
Ma Mère l’Oie and 
            the 
Pavane pour une infante défunte in their orchestral 
            form, all were originally written for and performed on the piano. 
            Ravel in fact regarded the two versions as complementary. Again, with 
            the instrumental coloration in mind, we can appreciate his scores 
            played on the piano as having validity in their own right, supplying 
            from our memories the orchestral clothing as appropriate. 
              
            The Hindemith 
Sonata on the other hand exists only in the version 
            for piano (four hands), and is a real rarity in the catalogues even 
            in this form. I can find only one other recording currently available. 
            It’s part of a Nimbus set of all Hindemith’s piano music 
            played by Bernard Roberts and David Strong. The duo here are rather 
            more leisurely than Roberts and Strong in the slow introduction to 
            the final movement. Otherwise there is little reason to prefer one 
            version over the other. 
              
            The recorded sound is present and lively, with a pleasant sense of 
            resonance. If the coupling of these three works is attractive, there 
            is no reason to hesitate. There is the additional attraction of Odradek’s 
            royalties policy, which means that once pressing and distribution 
            costs have been covered all profits go the artists themselves. 
              
          
Paul Corfield Godfrey    
          Masterwork Index: Rite 
            of spring