The 'five suites for two pianos' headline is a curious one. 
      For a start, Arensky wrote only four, as previous recordings of this corner 
      of his oeuvre indicate - though the now deleted Marco Polo 8.223497 also 
      had all five. The fifth is in fact a work Arensky called the 'Children's 
      Suite' op.65, which he wrote not for two pianos but for four hands 
      at one. Whether or not Aglika Genova and Liuben Dimitrov play it here at 
      a single keyboard or two is not entirely clear from either the stereo audio 
      or the accompanying booklet.
       
      However, without significant score alterations it is highly unlikely that 
      the four two-piano suites could be played at a single keyboard, yet CPO's 
      resident translator has them "here united on one instrument". 
      The original German is admittedly ambiguous: "hier in einem Klangkörper 
      vereint" - literally, 'together here in one (instrumental) body 
      (of sound)'. Bulgarians Genova and Dimitrov have previously 
      recorded a four-hands disc for CPO (999 848-2), but to do so under the title 
      of the present disc would be perverse. The assumption must be that they 
      play all five suites as advertised, on two pianos.
       
      Genova and Dimitrov already have several CDs for CPO to their credit, widely 
      well received. In Arensky - better transcribed as Aryensky - they give typically 
      assertive, persuasive accounts of these frequently virtuosic works, communicating 
      smoothly and confidently with each other and with expression and warmth 
      with the listener. They are soberly elegant, tastefully light-hearted, metronomically 
      paced, texturally transparent. Arensky's unerring ability to write 
      tunefully articulate, imaginatively idiomatic music is effectively underlined 
      by the technique and enthusiasm of such advocates.
       
      Overall this is a full-length recording of tremendous entertainment value 
      and lyrical invention that goes well beyond salon music. Arensky rarely 
      sounds very Russian. Though Tchaikovsky's influence lurks thereabouts, 
      in the piano suites he is more likely to be taken for a French composer 
      - most likely Saint-Saëns or, especially in the Fourth - and with apologies 
      to Poland - Chopin.
       
      Sound quality is very good. CPO's booklets are unique in their combination 
      of dense, detailed notes in shaky translations; for this disc the information 
      is somewhat sparser but the English version of the German notes is reasonably 
      idiomatic. Odd phrases like "great geniuses of world history like Peter 
      Tchaikovsky" must be ascribed rather to Evgeny Barankin's rhetorical 
      German original. The Duo's biographies are comically interspersed 
      with one-liners ("A Genuine Delight!" - "Brilliant Keyboard 
      Magic!") from international reviews.
       
      Pianophiles who have inexplicably failed hitherto to acquire a disc of Arensky's 
      music for two pianos will find this disc the ideal way to make amends.
       
      Byzantion
      Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk
       
      A full-length disc of tremendous entertainment value and lyrical invention.
    
       
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