An extremely distinguished 
                  figure in American Classical music, Bolcom is widely known as 
                  both composer and teacher, having been resident at the University 
                  of Michigan since 1973. A pupil of both Messiaen and Milhaud, 
                  his early style was overtly serial. His approach to composition 
                  was, however, to develop and mature significantly, following 
                  his discovery of ragtime in the late 1960s. The final result 
                  is an interesting amalgam of styles both American and European. 
                  He does not turn his back on earlier serial techniques and the 
                  influence of ragtime does not dominate. There is more here than 
                  just serial techniques and ragtime, and this disc displays a 
                  suitably versatile composer, who can combine his various influences 
                  with some success. 
                The six varied works 
                  on this disc, from Naxos’s ‘American Classics’ series, cover 
                  a period of some thirty years in Bolcom’s compositional career 
                  beginning in 1963. He is clearly at home in writing for two 
                  pianos and is able to write convincingly in both a light and 
                  a serious vein. 
                Recuerdos, 
                  (the opening work of the disc) shows the lighter side of Bolcom’s 
                  work, influenced here by Latin-American dances. Each of the 
                  three pieces in this suite is dedicated to important figures 
                  in both Latin and North American music, namely: Ernesto Nazareth, 
                  the creator of the Brazilian street folk-song; Louis-Moreau 
                  Gottschalk, America’s first virtuoso pianist and the Venezuelan 
                  composer Ramón Delegado Palacios.  
                The most substantial 
                  work in this recital, Frescoes, is considerably more 
                  turbulent, potent and often pensive music. The back of the CD 
                  erroneously states that it is arranged for two pianos, 
                  whereas the arrangement on the disc is for two pianos, harpsichord 
                  and harmonium for two players. It is split into two movements, 
                  War in Heaven and The Caves of Orcus. Amongst 
                  the conflict of the first movement, the harmonium lends a church-like 
                  reverence, which is distorted with the contrasting harmonium. 
                  The listener should however expect many more experimental qualities, 
                  including aleatorical improvisation and at, times almost, minimalist 
                  qualities.
                The most interesting 
                  and perhaps the most impressive work, in terms of structure 
                  is also the most recent – the Sonata for Two Pianos in One 
                  Movement from 1993. Some of the meditative and reflective 
                  slow-moving qualities of his teacher Messiaen can clearly be 
                  heard. This is also combined with further serial techniques, 
                  bitonal elements and flashes of ragtime and blues, creating 
                  a varied mix with frequent juxtapositions of styles and moods. 
                  The three movements of a typical sonata are reduced into one.
                The remaining three 
                  works (Interlude, The Serpent’s Kiss and Through 
                  Eden’s Gates) are of a smaller scale. Interlude is 
                  a prime example of Bolcom’s atonal compositional style from 
                  the early 1960s. The two slightly later pieces were arranged 
                  for two pianos from their original solo piano arrangement in 
                  1994. They see a return to the more frivolous and yet demanding 
                  approach and finish off a rounded and balanced programme.
                The two pianists 
                  on this disc, Elizabeth and Marcel Bergmann, give focused and 
                  intelligent performances, which - apart from a slightly distant 
                  harpsichord in Frescoes - is combined with a clear recorded 
                  sound.
                Adam Binks
                see also Review 
                  by Dominy Clements December Bargain 
                  of the Month