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I recently 
                reviewed an Encore disc by Joyce 
                Hatto on the Concert Artist label and 
                here comes another of their distinguished 
                pianists, the late Sergio Fiorentino 
                in a concert encore programme culled 
                from a large variety of recording locations 
                during his peripatetic 1960s. The programme 
                constructed from these dates is a less 
                Golden Age one than that recorded for 
                the purpose of a specific disc by Hatto 
                – and inevitably it has a somewhat puzzling 
                construction, though not unappealingly 
                catholic. 
              
 
              
I feel I should get 
                my one main disappointment out of the 
                way. I don’t much like Fiorentino’s 
                Bach-Busoni Chorale Preludes. Nun Komm’ 
                der Heiden Heiland is really very slow 
                with moments of exaggerated dynamics 
                and some sentimental and over limpid 
                phrasing. At such a slow speed it loses 
                direction and there’s no sense of a 
                Chorale arch. Nun freut euch is somewhat 
                better with some attractive voicings 
                but such as Feinberg, Petri and Fischer 
                are simply on a different plane. His 
                Schumann represents a return to form. 
                Here his linearity and sense of pointing 
                and clarity pay rich rewards. Of the 
                three Phantasiestücke he essays, 
                only Traumeswirren caused any concern 
                with some questionable rubati. The movement 
                from the F minor Sonata is fluent and 
                articulate, with considerable and significant 
                weight whilst a diaphanous quality veils 
                Vogel als Prophet. The fearsome Toccata 
                meets its match in Fiorentino whose 
                equable but always splendidly weighted 
                runs never detonate with Horowitzian 
                bravado but provide a musically voiced 
                foil. His Debussy is attractively limpid 
                and full of technical, expressive and 
                intellectual, as well as colouristic, 
                control whilst of the Satie the second 
                Gymnopédie has a confidential 
                naturalness that sets it apart. 
              
 
              
The nearest to an old 
                school approach comes with old favourites 
                such as the Rubinstein Mélodie 
                in F and Liadov’s A Musical Snuff Box 
                but the recital ends with Scriabin. 
                The graded tonality of the Nocturne 
                in D flat and the leonine grandeur of 
                the Etude in C sharp minor vie with 
                the propulsive linearity of the D sharp 
                minor Etude. The recorded sound does 
                it’s true vary slightly from venue to 
                venue but the remastering has been expertly 
                carried out and there is a consonance 
                about the acoustics that makes them 
                pleasing and appealing. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                 
              
 
              
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