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              Though remembered as 
                a great pianist Feinberg is coming into 
                his own at last as a composer on disc. 
                This is the second and final BIS issue 
                that presents the twelve piano sonatas 
                – perhaps someone will give us his Op.46 
                Violin Sonata (and his colleague and 
                friend Miaskovsky’s as well, while we’re 
                about it) or the big Third Piano Concerto. 
                Feinberg’s exceptionally well received 
                German tours in the 1920s, which led 
                to radio broadcasts and recordings (see 
                Arbiter’s Feinberg release for those), 
                were followed by a return to a politically 
                changed Soviet Union. The sonatas recorded 
                in this volume are not as pyrotechnic 
                or externalised as the first six, of 
                which I suppose the Sixth has garnered 
                some of the greatest publicity and renown. 
                But make no mistake; this later compositional 
                move was no retreat into generic simplicity. 
                These are tough, sinewy, problematic 
                and difficult pieces and they take some 
                playing. 
              
 
              
Nos 7-9 are receiving 
                premiere recordings which makes one 
                all the more grateful to this pioneering 
                record label for uncovering them and 
                having the guts to issue them in such 
                well realised performances by two young 
                and staunchly dedicated pianists – BIS’s 
                Skalkottas series shows their commitment 
                at its most acute and this series isn’t 
                so far behind. Though Feinberg did perform 
                the Seventh in the 1920s he gradually 
                dropped it, fearing its advanced writing 
                would cause conflict with the Soviet 
                authorities. Cast in three movements 
                its weighty concentration is graced 
                with bell tolls and a highly polyphonic, 
                tense and dramatic outline. Repeated 
                washes and waves of drama (anger?) animate 
                the end of the opening Allegro moderato. 
                There’s a rapt Scriabinesque stillness 
                in the second movement and a powerful 
                conclusion even though the sonata actually 
                ends with a certain gentle resolution. 
                Formally it’s rather oddly constructed 
                with the long first movement followed 
                by ones of rapidly decreasing length. 
                The Eighth is a more concise work, once 
                again in three movements and lasting 
                a quarter of an hour. Less frantic but 
                still animated, its most distinguished 
                feature is a barcarolle-like central 
                Andante – romantic, optimistic, nostalgic 
                – which leads on to a driving finale 
                with moments of deliberate chaos embedded 
                into the music. 
              
 
              
No.9 in one movement 
                dates from 1939. I like the excellent 
                sleeve-note writer’s phrase about its 
                being "combative, menacing and 
                evanescent" – quite so. The initial 
                optimism is chilled, corralled and fractured, 
                all animated by virtuoso peals and runs. 
                The wartime Tenth was composed over 
                a period of just under five years, a 
                period he spent in evacuation alongside 
                Miaskovsky and Prokofiev. This tough, 
                sinewy and craggy work is certainly 
                informed by the latter – and its hints 
                and glints of the folk tale (sardonic, 
                not Medtner-like) are also full of barely 
                concealed menace. There are rattling 
                machine gun attacks, with strongly assertive 
                melodies trying to emerge from the thicket 
                of the writing. Over all, the funereal 
                hangs heavy. The Eleventh, the penultimate 
                Sonata, is alternately galvanic and 
                sombre. A driving Chorale-like figure 
                appears to banish and absolve all doubt 
                – though the notes are honest in noting 
                formal weaknesses in the writing. I 
                still find the moment of Bachian transfiguration 
                moving, notwithstanding some deficiencies 
                in the writing – Feinberg was one of 
                the most lucid and convincing of Russian 
                Bachians (his final 1962 recordings, 
                made within weeks of his death and in 
                the full knowledge of his cancer, are 
                some of the most moving performances 
                I know). The last Sonata is light and 
                fluent and marks a return to the three-movement 
                structure he’d last used in 1933-34, 
                nearly thirty years before. Its opening 
                is really rather beautiful but those 
                characteristic Feinbergian flashes are 
                still there; his early post-Schoenbergian 
                position now subsumed into something 
                less doctrinaire – and there’s plenty 
                of delicacy in the final Improvisation. 
              
 
              
The performances, as 
                I hinted earlier, are vibrantly committed. 
                It was no easy task to get these works 
                under the fingers, not least because 
                the chances of playing them in sonata 
                recitals will be very limited. There 
                are, however tough and combative, rewarding 
                and enlivening things here; touching, 
                too. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf 
                
              
Volume 
                1 
                RECORDING OF THE MONTH Samuil 
                Evgenievitch FEINBERG (1890-1962) 
                The 
                Twelve Piano Sonatas: Nos. 1-6: 
                No. 1, Op. 1a (1915) [6’51]; 
                No. 2, Op. 2b (1915-16) [9’01]; 
                No. 3, Op. 3b (1916) [23’24]; 
                No. 4, Op. 6a (1918) [8’33]; 
                No. 5, Op. 10a (1920-21) 
                [8’05]; No. 6, Op. 13c (1923) 
                [14’20]. 
 
                aNikolaos Samaltanos, bcChristophe 
                Sirodeau (pianos). Rec. Eglise Evangélique 
                Saint-Marcel, Paris, in abSpring 
                2002 and cDec 1993. DDD 
 
                BIS CD-1413 [70’13] [CC]  
              
Revelatory. 
                The music of Feinberg is hypnotic in 
                the extreme, close to Scriabin in mystical 
                mode. Enjoy the voyage of discovery