Manuel María PONCE (1882–1948)
  Complete Piano Works - 1
  Estrellita - Metamorfosis de Concierto [3:42]
  Preludio Mexicano 'Cielito Lindo' [0:57]
  A la Orilla de un Palmar [3:43]
  Serenata Mexicana 'Alevántate' [2:35]
  Valentina [1:13]
  Ven, ¡Oh Luna! [2:40]
  Preludio Mexicano 'Cuiden Su Vida' [3:52]
  Arrulladora Mexicana 'La Rancherita' [2:28]
  Barcarola Mexicana 'Xochimilco' [2:40]
  Mañanitas [0:41]
  Scherzino Mexicano [1:31]
  Scherzino Maya [0:50]
  Intermezzo no.1 [2:56]
  Mazurka de Salón in A flat* [1:56]
  Mazurka in D minor * [2:32]
  Mazurka a la Española [3:16]
  Preludio Romántico [1:50]
  Deux Etudes [3:31]
  Sonatina [10:26]
            Cuatro Danzas Mexicanas [6:13]
          Álvaro Cendoya (piano)
		  rec. Amezketa, Guipuzkoa, Spain, 28-30 June 2012. DDD
          GRAND PIANO GP 638   [59:33]  
		
		 
		
		  This is the first of eight volumes from Grand Piano offering the complete solo piano music of Mexican composer Manuel Ponce. Though best known for his influential guitar works, which his friend Andrés Segovia lauded and promoted, and a number of which are now part of every guitarist's repertory, Ponce wrote fluently in most genres, leaving a substantial and impressive corpus to posterity.
   
          Nevertheless, this first disc does not make an immediate case for Ponce's 
          piano music. Though taken from across the composer's career, most of 
          the pieces performed here by Basque-Iranian pianist Álvaro Cendoya are 
          little more than bagatelles, of a nature such that they might have been 
          improvised by Ponce on rainy days stuck indoors at the keyboard. The 
          stylistically eclectic Sonatina, itself diminutive by most measures, 
          dwarfs the rest in terms of length.
           
          Yet Ponce was by all accounts a terrific pianist and his music is nothing 
          if not idiomatic and evocative. As some of the titles here suggest, 
          he combines lyrical nationalism, stemming from his interest in folk/traditional 
          music, with mild-mannered Romanticism to rustle up a series of attractive 
          miniatures brimming with warm tunes and casual elegance. His best known 
          work, Estrellita, appears in its piano version, and many will recognise 
          the classic mariachi tune of the Mexican Prelude; some pianophiles may 
          be familiar with the Intermezzo too. Paolo Mello's booklet notes describe 
          the material of this initial recital as ranging "from European-influenced 
          Romanticism to nationalist Romanticism and indigenous nationalism, and 
          on again to advanced modernism". This is chiefly true, although 
          any modernist leanings detectable here are very modest.
           
          Cendoya, professor at the Basque Conservatory of Music, already has 
          two CDs to his credit for Naxos, the piano and chamber music of one 
          of the Basque Country's most significant composers, Tomás Garbizu (8.557630, 
          8.572096). He will not have been stretched by much of this programme, 
          which is at any rate rather short and contains only five minutes of 
          premieres, but he makes it an enjoyable experience for the listener 
          nonetheless. Sound quality, whilst not jaw-dropping, is good, and the 
          English-Spanish notes informative and well written/translated.
           
          Though this opener is not a must-have, it augurs well on the whole for 
          the rest of the series, which should bring a better look at what Mello 
          calls Ponce's "vast gamut of harmonic sonorities, stylistic variation 
          and tonal riches." If Grand Piano's previous form is anything to 
          go by, the next one will appear sooner rather than later.
   
          
Byzantion
  Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk