Brana continues its 
                reclamation of Polish pianist’s Felicja 
                Blumental’s recorded legacy with this 
                rather disparate trio of recordings. 
                I think we can dispose of Saint-Saëns’ 
                ebullient and terpsichorean Wedding 
                Cake, a ten-minute romp, which is nicely 
                played by Blumental but in very constricted 
                sound and less than first rate accompaniment. 
                The Kuhlau is another rarity and cut 
                from a much better aural cloth. Dedicated 
                to C.E.F. Weyse, this was one of only 
                two concertante works written by the 
                Danish Kuhlau. A Court composer (unsalaried 
                but prestigious) and an admired pianist 
                whose career took him across the continent 
                of Europe he was, compositionally speaking, 
                on the cusp of the new Romantic aesthetic 
                whilst retaining distinct classical 
                procedures, as can clearly be heard 
                in this attractive work. The Allegro 
                opening is gallant as could be before 
                developing some Beethovenian power (the 
                Dane had met Beethoven and knew his 
                music). Kuhlau throws in a fine, pompous 
                orchestral march section, on which the 
                piano muses and decorates prettily and 
                wittily. There’s some notable wind writing 
                along the way as well. The Intermezzo 
                has a gracious, unperfumed cantilever; 
                melodically it’s not especially individual 
                or distinctive but has charm. The finale 
                is light-hearted and perky with good 
                touches for the animating left hand 
                of the note perfect pianist. 
              
 
              
Though she is more 
                generally remembered for her committed 
                forays into the contemporary and Latin 
                American piano repertoire we have enough 
                examples on disc to show how adept a 
                classicist Blumental was and her ventures 
                into the romantic literature were also 
                rewarding. Her Schumann was recorded 
                in Vienna in 1958 with Hans Swarowski 
                conducting the Vienna Pro Musica Orchestra. 
                The sound can be a wee bit papery but 
                her playing is attractively scaled and 
                persuasive in its avoidance of specious 
                rhetoric. 
              
 
              
This is another worthwhile 
                retrieval of Blumental material; the 
                notes are rather brief but the emphasis 
                is rightly on a pianist who invariably 
                has interesting things to convey. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf