Schubert confessed that his compositions sprang from his sorrows and those
that give the world the greatest delight were born of his deepest griefs.
His
Four Impromptus of D. 935 embody this tautness between elation
and dejection and his schizophrenic sense of self. In Thomas Osborne's
The Ends of the Earth, this measure of expansiveness is tested in
the remit of the piano as Derek Kealii Polischuck must extend the
conventional use of the piano to convey percussive, pizzicato and melodic
sounds.
Unfortunately the
Impromptu in F minor (No. 1) seems sluggish and
heavy; perhaps a quicker pace or more vigour would lift this piece and give
it a sense of purpose and emotional complexity. In comparison to Aldo
Ciccolini's robust, virtuosic recording, Polischuck sounds safe and somewhat
lacking in intent. Whilst it is regrettable that there is no desperation,
urgency or sense of a spirit grappling with forces around it, this recording
does recognise the sombre and tender emotions behind Schubert's music. The
Impromptu in B flat major is the most pleasing Schubert piece here.
As a theme with variations - resembling a theme from the incidental music to
the play
Rosamunde and also appearing in the second movement of the
String Quartet in A Minor - this is graceful and delicate as it
plays with five extended variations. Polischuck's tone is both light and
full as he facilely dances over the notes. He resists melodramatic dynamic
shifts as the piece ventures into more sensational territory. Overall,
despite there being moments of beauty and clarity - such as the driving
sequence of triplets in the
Impromptu in A flat major -
Polischuck's
Impromptus fail to recognise the structure and form of
these pieces. In the
Impromptu in F minor (No. 4) he lacks the
frenzy and urgency which wrestles with Schubert's 3/8 meter and emblazoned
coda. The results sound glib; there is a distinct lack of vitality in a
piece which is perhaps the most technically demanding of the Impromptus.
Employing a wide variety of keyboard writing, including scale runs (at times
in unison), arpeggios, broken chords, quick passages in thirds and trills
along with extreme harmonic and rhythmic effects, combined with demonically
charming melodies, this has the potential to be a dazzling and fascinating
display of keyboard prowess. Here it sounds rather humdrum. For a recording
that extracts the quietude and unquantifiable nausea (in Sartre's sense of
the word), I recommend Cordelia Williams's recording (SOMMCD 0127) whose
performance demonstrates brilliant technique, flexibility and well measured
emotive input.
Dark and otherworldly, Osborne's
Terra Incognita is indeed
unknown territory both for listener and performer. Using mallets to play on
the strings and frame, Polischuck extracts threatening, percussive sounds to
alert and startle. Launching forth with clashing chords in
Mare
Incognitum, this movement develops to embody the tumbling of waves and
the expansive swell of the ocean. Osborne's composition holds the interest
as he uses Indonesian rhythms and finishes with an Okinawan melody - more
commonly known as Ryukyuan music from the Southern Islands of Japan - to
bring otherworldly melodies home. With hints of Mompou and Debussy,
Osborne's opening to
Terra Pericolosa is impressionistic.
Polischuck shapes these phrases with alert spontaneity and excitement. A
startling sense of discovery is felt in the clusters of chords at the close.
Lastly,
Terra Nullius (no man's land) juxtaposes a fragment of an
incomplete Schubert song with 'Kaulana Na Pua' - 'Famous are the Flowers', a
well-known Hawaiian song. By muting the strings of the piano and playing
with the extremes of the piano's range - even strumming the strings to
produce lute-like sounds - Polischuck conveys Osborne's fascination and
enchantment. Here is that sense of discovery of uncharted lands and travels
beyond the boundaries all conjured through the use of untraditional
techniques.
Lucy Jeffery