The annual piano festival 
                of Chethams School of Music is now a 
                well-established feature of the summer 
                festival scene and attracts many star 
                pianists to its teaching roster. Alicja 
                Fiderkiewicz is perhaps less well-known 
                than some; her potted biography in the 
                notes leaps strangely from 1975 to 2004 
                though she has been associated with 
                Chethams for some time. The selection 
                of critical notices (excessively long, 
                as seems to be commonplace in notes 
                now), is, naturally, extremely positive 
                while perpetuating a few ridiculous 
                examples of critic-speak. To quote the 
                Daily Telegraph: "[she] … demonstrated 
                the truth of the great Rubinstein’s 
                saying – that ‘only Poles can play Chopin 
                properly’ …". The great Rubinstein 
                should never have made such a chauvinistic 
                generalisation in the first place (starting 
                with the Hungarian Liszt, pianists of 
                every nationality have excelled in Chopin’s 
                music) and the fact that a Pole plays 
                it well today demonstrates nothing. 
              
 
              
Be all that as it may, 
                Alicja Fiderkiewicz, in her live recital 
                from the fourth annual Chethams festival 
                does demonstrate a natural feeling for 
                Chopin. The gentle, even homely, Impromptus 
                receive unexaggerated performances while 
                the Barcarolle - not Polish, nor even 
                Venetian but wholly Chopin – is similarly 
                straightforward. The performance lacks 
                the delicacy of that of Alwin Bär 
                in his contribution to Brilliant’s complete 
                set of Chopin’s piano music (an amazing 
                bargain). In the Nocturne, Maria João 
                Pires on Deutsche Grammophon is much 
                more dramatic though some have found 
                her performances of the complete Nocturnes 
                a distortion of Chopin’s understated 
                style. She is certainly favoured with 
                a much better recording and a livelier 
                acoustic than is Alicja Fiderkiewicz 
                on the present disc. Dunelm’s sound 
                quality is dull and restricted which 
                may be due to the live concert situation. 
              
 
              
Alicja Fiderkiewicz 
                gives a strong performance of the Hindemith 
                sonata, one of those works I am glad 
                to have heard but may pass up at a second 
                opportunity. The work is agreeable enough 
                with four well-contrasted movements 
                but leaves no very distinct impression. 
                However, if you are a devotee of this 
                composer, you will find that the performance 
                conforms to none of the Hindemithian 
                clichés; it is not dry or mechanistic 
                but sensitive with plenty of light and 
                shade. The Franck receives a powerful 
                performance that doesn’t displace memories 
                of those by Hough and Perahia. All in 
                all, this is a well played recital, 
                somewhat undermined by the recording 
                quality. 
              
Roger Blackburn