Josef SUK (1874-1935)
O Matince, Op.28 [19:57]
Ernest CAHUSSON (1855-1899)
Four Dances, Op.26 (1896) [13:48]
Max REGER (1873-1916)
Aus Meinem Tagebuch, Op.82 No.3 (1910-11) [26:36]
Paul Orgel (piano)
rec. August 2014, Futura Productions, Roslindale, Massachusetts
MSR CLASSICS MS1533 [60:33]
Paul Orgel's rationale for this unlikely looking triptych is a certain
stylistic consonance. Each of the three composers enshrines elements of late
Romanticism but looks beyond it to, variously, impressionism, or
anticipations of neo-classicism, or - in Reger's case - to an even greater
freedom of expression. A further binding component, he notes, is provided by
the shared moods of the three cycles. Whether one fully buys the first
rationale is another matter, but the good news is that one can listen to the
three works unencumbered by the need for explanation. In any case, these
cycles, all written between 1896 and 1911, are not so common on disc.
Suk's O Matince (About Mother) is a five-movement cycle composed in 1907.
Strangely the English translation here of the first of the five is
incomplete; it should be
When Mother was still a little girl, not
When Mother was a little girl. This isn't quite as pedantic as it
sounds, as the sense of reflective limpidity that this movement generates -
there's even a ghostly memory of Suk's
Piseň lásky - is made the more so through
tactful rubati and simplicity of phrasing. There is something a touch
objectified and cool about Orgel's playing. He is exceptionally fast in the
central panel of the cycle -
How Mother sang at night to her sick
child - and because of the recording level, which is similarly rather
hard, one can hear the pedal action. Risto Lauriala recorded this cycle on
an all-Suk disc for Naxos (8.553762) and proves to have a warmer, more
rounded tone and a more sympathetic approach. Best of all is Ivan Moravec
(Supraphon SU 3509-2 111) whose rhythmic subtlety and command of the idiom,
not least phrasally, operates on another level entirely.
Chausson's Four Dances, Op.26 (1896) are couched in the language of old
dance forms such as the
Forlane and
Sarabande and their
more straightforward qualities offer Orgel opportunities for expert
characterisation. Certainly he seems to me more idiomatic than in Suk, which
is strange as he has recorded Czech music before. Tempi are unexceptionable
- unlike in the Suk - and he responds well to the more arrestingly extrovert
charms of the increasingly dramatic
Forlane in particular. Jean
Doyen proves the tonally more variegated performer of this repertoire,
though again Orgel isn't helped by that cool recording quality. Reger's
Aus meinem Tagebuch (From My Diary) is made up of 35 pieces
published in four volumes. The third volume was finished in 1911 and
contains six character pieces largely modelled on Brahms' late piano cycles.
I think the opening
Lied could be more
sostenuto than
Orgel is prepared to give, and the
Gavotte drags slightly - though
this is not necessarily Orgel's fault. Some of the best playing in the disc
comes in this cycle, though that hard sound can make full appreciation
difficult and I'm curious as to whether this is Orgel's own preference.
Jonathan Woolf