PASSION FOR
PIANO
Joseph HAYDN
Sonata in D, Hob.XVI/37 (Christoph Eschenbach)
Franz LISZT
Liebestraum, S.541/3, Consolation, S.172/6 (Daniel Barenboim), Funérailles,
S.173/7 (Mikhail Pletnev), Feux Follets, S.139/5, Harmonies du Soir, S.139/11
(Sviatoslav Richter), Hungarian Rhapsody no.2, S.244 (Roberto Szidon), La
Campanella, S.140/3 (Jorge Bolet)
Felix MENDELSSOHN
Lieder ohne Worte, opp.67/4 & 62/6 (Daniel Barenboim)
Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART
Fantasia in d, K.397 (Wilhelm Kempff), Sonata in C, K.545,Rondo in D, K.485
(Christoph Eschenbach)
Francis POULENC
3 mouvements perpétuels, Toccata (Pascal Rogé)
Sergei PROKOFIEV
Visions fugitives, op.22/3, 6, 9 (Sviatoslav Richter)
Sergei RACHMANINOV
Prelude in c sharp. Op.3/2 (Lazar Berman), Prelude in g, op.23/5 (Sviatoslav
Richter)
Maurice RAVEL
Alborada del Gracioso (Rudolf Firkusny)
Anton RUBINSTEIN
Melody in F, op.3/1 (Shura Cherkassky)
Domenico SCARLATTI
Sonatas in E, K.531, b, K.87, E,K.20 (Alexis Weissenberg)
Franz SCHUBERT
Impromptu in E flat, D.899/2, Moment musical in f,D.780/3 (Wilhelm Kempff)
Robert SCHUMANN
Arabeske, op.18 (Wilhelm Kempff), Vogel als Prophet, op.82/7 (Sviatoslav
Richter), Träumerei, op.15/7 (Martha Argerich)
Alexander SCRIABIN
Etude in c sharp, op.42/5 (Yevgeny Kissin)
Christian SINDING
Rustle of Spring, op.32/3 (Joseph Cooper)
Piotr Ilych TCHAIKOVSKY
Dumka, op.59 (Vladimir Ashkenazy)
rec various locations 1950s-1990s
DG PANORAMA 469 232-2
[2 CDs: 78.38;
80.43]
Crotchet
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recommendations |
I try, when reviewing these compilations, to avoid the "fancy not including
" line, but a passion for piano which excludes Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy
and Bartók, four composers who changed our perception of the instrument,
is a little off-beat. Hoping to find that there was some kind of hidden agenda
behind this I turned to the booklet notes but no, just sketchy, slightly
gossipy comments on the pieces here and a chronology of the instrument which
says less than any decent non-specialist encyclopaedia would tell you. Still,
we get "Melody in F" and "Rustle of Spring", for this relief much thanks,
but why no "Maiden's Prayer"? And then, I appreciate that, of the supremes,
Rubinstein was not available because he recorded for other companies, but
Horowitz and Michelangeli were and so, as you can see, was Joseph Cooper
To take the title seriously for a moment, "Passion for Piano" conjures up
an image of that old-style virtuoso dedicated first and foremost to his
instrument, the colours, sounds and effects it could produce, and treating
the music as a mere vehicle. One remembers names like Godowsky or Rosenthal,
and, of the pianists here, it is Bolet and Cherkassky who in some degree
maintained that tradition until recent times. Listen to Bolet relishing every
note of "La Campanella", it is a scintillating display. Cherkassky deserved
other material but at least the "Melody in F" finds him separating melody
and accompaniment in a way we too seldom hear today. Pianists like Richter
or Kempff were primarily fired by a "Passion for Music", but we can also
hear their very real passion for the instrument through which they expressed
their music. In Prokofiev and Schumann Richter delights in extracting a range
of refined timbres while Rachmaninov and Liszt combine staggering virtuosity
with thrilling musical effect. These are live recordings and seem to have
been made in a rest-home for tubercular patients, yet such is the awe-inspiring
power of the last climax of "Harmonies du Soir" that even they retreat into
silence and allow him to play the following soft section almost undisturbed.
Could I suggest that in future, coughers on live recordings should be identified
and their names be published on the CD cover as a Roll of Shame (but no royalties
to them, please)? Wilhelm Kempff was another kind of pianist, but again his
Schubert, bluffer than expected (and rather clangingly recorded), exudes
sheer enjoyment of what he is doing.
Pletnev's very good "Funérailles" pales into significance before the
Richter performances but Szidon's Rhapsody holds up remarkably well between
Richter |
and Bolet. Berman and Kissin are effective without leaving a lasting impression
and Argerich should have been allotted more space. Out of context her
"Träumerei" is occasionally bumpy but remember this is, I swear, the
hardest piece to bring off in the whole programme. Rogé presents his
Poulenc pieces with a real sense of enjoyment.
Alexis Weissenberg has been an enigmatic and controversial presence on the
concert platform for many years. His Scarlatti finds him seeking out a wide
range of fascinating timbres. It is a wholly pianistic conception of the
music but an absorbingly fine one. Another pianist not quite in the mainstream
was Rudolf Firkusny - a "pianist's pianist" who never quite reached the masses.
Impossible to say from one piece if this was justified, but this "Alborada"
is as fine as any I know, a riot of rhythm and colour, safer technically
than Gieseking's and without the desperate (in my view inappropriate) intensity
of poor dying Lipatti's manic version.
Joseph Cooper expressed his "Passion for Music" in another way still. Maybe
conscious of his limitations as a straightforward concert pianist he had
a great gift for communicating with those who "don't like music but like
the sound it makes" (Beecham's quip). Musicians may smirk at memories of
his quiz-show "Face the Music" and its hidden melodies, but it made many
a convert to classical music. He had a courteous way with middle-aged ladies
and no doubt they loved to hear him play "Rustle of Spring". Alas, in the
cold light of this CD it is metronomical and heavy-fisted.
Some of the pianists here have increasingly expressed their "Passion of Music"
via conducting. Is it pure chance that they make a generally poor impression
here? Eschenbach is tough and graceless in Haydn, and no more than correct
in Mozart. Barenboim seems rather condescending towards Liszt, his off-hand
manner revealing a banality which is perhaps more his than Liszt's. He is
better in Mendelssohn but his "Bee's Wedding" (here called "Spinning Song",
after its German nickname) is an angry swarm at times and in Spring Song
he uses less pedal than we usually hear. This could have been interesting
had he obtained a more singing melody line and more delicate grace-notes
in the harp-like accompaniment. However, Ashkenazy finishes the programme
in fine style, taking what at times seems an orchestral piece written for
the piano and bringing it off triumphantly.
The recordings date from 1957 (the Richter "Prophet Bird") to 1998 (Pletnev)
so there is obviously a degree of variation. Despite the perplexing programme
a good deal of fine playing is to be heard here.
Christopher Howell |