At a little over seventy-one minutes in length 
                  this is a generously filled disc although I have to say straight 
                  away that the quality of performance is somewhat variable. There 
                  is one work in particular that makes the disc worthwhile, namely 
                  the Eight Preludes of Frank Martin. Written in 1948 for 
                  Dinu Lipatti, who due to poor health was never able to play 
                  them, each of these pieces is a gem, challenging yet highly 
                  idiomatic and immediately recognisable as the work of Martin. 
                  It struck me very clearly whilst listening to this work that 
                  the ghost of Bach (one of the composer’s self confessed heroes) 
                  is rarely far away, notably in Martin’s wonderfully assured 
                  use of counterpoint, yet his highly personal melodic and harmonic 
                  language always shines through with intensity (sample one - 
                  track twenty). Kikuchi gives a secure, technically robust performance, 
                  finely capturing the, by turns, haunting, profound, sometimes 
                  even whimsical nature of each prelude. The final prelude, marked 
                  Vivace, with its echoes of the Petite Symphonie Concertante 
                  of three years earlier, forms a particularly satisfying, finely 
                  played conclusion to the work (sample two - track twenty six).
                
                In many ways it is a shame that the only other 
                  complete work on the disc is Szymanowski’s Opus One set of Nine 
                  Preludes, for other than the Martin this interesting and 
                  impressively assured early work undoubtedly draws the finest 
                  playing from Kikuchi. There is sensitivity on display here that 
                  does not always surface in the other works on the disc. As an 
                  example the sixth prelude (sample three - track eleven), marked 
                  lento mesto, is beautifully realised whereas Debussy’s 
                  The Girl with the Flaxen Hair (sample three - track seventeen) 
                  is somewhat emotionally detached in comparison. By the same 
                  token it may have been a mistake to open the disc with Rachmaninov’s 
                  famous Prelude in C sharp minor, for anyone who is used 
                  to this work in a performance by an acknowledged master is likely 
                  to find this performance sterile and lacking in depth, as I 
                  did.
                
                Elsewhere on the disc Prokofiev’s Opus 12 No. 
                  7 Prélude receives an adequate performance as 
                  do Satie’s typically eccentric Three Flaccid Preludes (for 
                  a dog). The Chopin and Debussy come off less successfully, 
                  ultimately lacking strength of character as well as the optimum 
                  degree of refinement in the playing. 
                
                I suspect that Kikuchi’s talents would have 
                  been better served if this disc had been made up of three major 
                  works rather than the collection of "fillers" that 
                  we have been given. Certainly the Martin and Szymanowski offer 
                  much to enjoy although the lingering impression is that Kikuchi 
                  fails to get "inside" the other works in the same 
                  way.
                
                Pavane’s recorded sound is adequate with a 
                  good dynamic range although the booklet notes are disappointing 
                  both in content and translation.
                
                 
                Christopher Thomas.