Bless the good burghers 
                of Husum and the enterprising Peter 
                Froundjian and Jesper Bühl of Danacord. 
                2004 saw the sixteenth annual Husum 
                Festival of Piano Music Rarities. As 
                with the previous Husum festivals Danacord 
                have now issued a disc to mark the event. 
                If you have any of the rest of them 
                then you will know that the pianists 
                who have perform at Husum bring with 
                them rarities to dust off and hold up 
                to an appreciative light. 
              
 
              
The Belgian pianist 
                Edna Stern despatches the Haydn Capriccio 
                in lively fashion with the composer 
                seeming to allude to Beethoven at one 
                moment and Mozart the next. Boris Bloch's 
                Vivaldi arr. J.S. Bach is similarly 
                poised and clean-limbed although the 
                central movement recalls calming pieces 
                such as Schnittke's Spiegel im Spiegel. 
                By contrast Bloch dusts of Dargomizhky's 
                arrangement of Liszt's Tarentelle. 
                Which came first I wonder? This Dargomizhky/Liszt 
                display piece or Balakirev's Islamey. 
                There are resemblances. 
              
 
              
Hamelin is well enough 
                known to us. His Chopin arr. Liszt is 
                sumptuous without languor and contrasts 
                with the pluvial drip and swirl of Anamorfosi 
                by Sciarrino - a transmogrification 
                of Singin’ in the Rain. Goossens' 
                Punch and Judy Show (from the 
                suite Kaleidoscope) is taken 
                at giddy player-piano velocity and ends 
                with a grin that clearly delighted the 
                audience. Ugorski, with his magical 
                impact-softened touch, gives us a predominantly 
                dreamy and contented Poulenc Thème 
                Varié although the composer 
                has the piece ending in Rachmaninovian 
                majesty. 
              
 
              
Igor Kamenz leads us 
                un-rushed through the Grainger's 1927 
                Ramble on 'Der Rosenkavalier'. 
                True to form Grainger again confirms 
                his status as a master of transcription, 
                sentimentality and fantasy. Just listen 
                to the crystalline whisper at 2.09 and 
                7'17 as the Presentation of the Rose 
                music conjures a silvery aura. Delian 
                and stretching languidly in the welcoming 
                sun is Cui's 1887 Far Niente 
                - dolce indeed. 
              
 
              
It is typical of Jonathan 
                Powell that his recital should have 
                included sonatas by Stanchinsky, Feinberg 
                and Szymanowski. However he is recorded 
                here in the world premiere of Joseph 
                Marx's three Schmetterlingsgeschichten 
                (Butterfly Stories). The 
                complete sequence takes just about five 
                minutes. These are impressionistic pieces 
                in Marx's best warm luxuriant manner 
                often characterised by quietly chiming 
                music rounded with filigree flourishes. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Plowright's 
                collection is also stimulating. He has 
                already recorded both Stojowski concertos 
                for Hyperion (excellent too though not 
                high art!) so the presence of his Caprice 
                Orientale in a stormy inferno of 
                acceleration and becalming. It again 
                recalls Islamey (1.12). Anything 
                by Bortkiewicz is going to be worth 
                hearing. We really need a complete Bortkiewicz 
                Edition including the four piano concertos 
                and the concertos for cello and violin. 
                Here the Etude in D flat major is alive 
                with turbulence and reeks with hyper-romantic 
                fin-de-siècle gestures. You might 
                here think of Bortkiewicz as in the 
                same league as Medtner but without the 
                poetic complexity. Plowright rounds 
                out the disc with A Harrington Gibbs' 
                arr Art Tatum in Runnin' Wild in 
                which the pianist delights in stride 
                piano - a whirlwind roller-coaster of 
                a piece. 
              
 
              
Husum sets the unhackneyed 
                agenda again. Let's wish the festival 
                a long life. The foundations they lay 
                today are built on by other companies 
                tomorrow. For variety and for that 'surprised 
                by delight' experience do try this disc 
                or any of the other Husum Danacord collection. 
              
Rob Barnett