Fritz KREISLER (1875-1962)
          Hommage À Fritz Kreisler
  Barnabás Kelemen (violin)
  Zoltán Kocsis (piano)
  rec. August 2016, Phoenix Studio, Diósd
  BUDAPEST MUSIC CENTRE BMCCD250 [75:20]
	     This was Zoltán Kocsis’ last recording, taped in 
          August 2016. It was also a disc in which he, and not Barnabas Kelemen, 
          selected the Kreislerian repertoire, and it was Kocsis who wrote the 
          erudite, witty and sometimes even combative booklet notes. For example, 
          he characterises Kreisler’s accompanists as ‘relatively 
          poor, sometimes even unworthy…mediocre or worse’. There’s 
          certainly an argument to be had here, but at a time in recorded history 
          when all too often the piano accompanist remained anonymous on the 78 
          label, it could not help being a case of coach-and-horses. What Kocsis 
          is pointing out, though, is the relative downplaying of the piano role 
          in Kreisler recordings and it’s clear that he is determined that 
          this is not to be the case in his own. Kreisler himself, as is well-known, 
          was an excellent pianist. Kocsis duly honours the piano spectrum.
          
          In any case the Kelemen-Kocsis partnership is one fully worthy to play 
          these 21 pieces. There is a full quotient of élan in Tambourin chinois 
          and whilst Kelemen sensibly makes no attempt to replicate Kreisler’s 
          (in any case) inimitable expressive arsenal, he plays up to tempo and 
          with invigorating confidence throughout the recital. A case in point 
          is the hyphenated Dvořák Slavonic Dance where the violinist’s 
          assertive confidence is matched by Kocsis who, as his notes would suggest, 
          remains unafraid to draw the listener’s ear as much to the piano 
          writing as to that for the violin. The Balogh-Kreisler Dirge of 
          the North is quite rare on disc – it’s certainly no 
          lollipop staple – and here Kelemen’s vibrato takes on a 
          richer tone whilst Syncopation is also welcome given its own 
          relative rarity in all-Kreisler discs. There are a couple of adeptly 
          succulent slides, and fine dynamics, in Liebesleid and superb, 
          Buster Keaton pianism in its companion, Liebesfreud where the 
          exchanges between the two musicians are at their zenith. It’s 
          hard sometimes not to overdo the coquettish rubati in Schön Rosmarin 
          but Kelemen just about stays within bounds, adding a flirtatious patina 
          to his playing. Maybe the Beethoven Rondino is slightly too 
          droll for its own good especially in respect of articulation and Kocsis’s 
          own high octane contribution, and the Marche miniature viennoise 
          is quite lavishly characterised – but rather that than a too timid 
          approach. If Dvořák’s Humoreske is too arch then 
          compensation comes in the form of the richly lyric Andante cantabile 
          performance, the fine Recitativo and Scherzo-Caprice, where 
          Kelemen is solo, and the masculine swagger of the Praeludium and 
          Allegro which ends the programme confidently.
          
          This perhaps unexpected Kocsis swansong documents the excellent rapport 
          he had developed with his younger compatriot. It’s also a splendid 
          recital in its own terms.
          
          Jonathan Woolf 
          
          Disc contents
          Tambourin chinois, Op. 3 [3:36]
          Chanson Louis XIII et Pavane in the style of Louis Couperin (1626-1661) 
          [4:55]
          Allegretto in the style of Luigi Boccherini (1743-1805) [3:04]
          Dvořák-Kreisler: Slavonic Dance No.2 [4:13]
          Balogh-Kreisler: Dirge of the North [2:54]
          Liebesleid [3:44]
          Liebesfreud [3:20]
          Schön Rosmarin [1:55]
          Syncopation [1:59]
          Rondino on a theme by Beethoven [2:21]
          Dvořák-Kreisler: Indian Lament [5:00]
          Marche miniature viennoise [3:14]
          Dvořák-Kreisler: Humoreske, Op. 101, No. 7 [2:55]
          La Gitana [3:24]
          Gypsy caprice [4:46]
          Tchaikovsky-Kreisler: Andante cantabile, Op. 11 [5:26]
          Toy Soldier’s March [2:16]
          Recitativo and Scherzo-Caprice, Op. 6 [4:32]
          Heuberger-Kreisler: Midnight Bells (Der Opernball) [2:51]
          Caprice viennois, Op. 2 [3:57]
          Praeludium and Allegro in the style of Gaetano Pugnano (1731-1798) [4:46]