Marco Sollini has made 
                something of a speciality of recording 
                the piano compositions of operatic composers: 
                his series of the piano works of Rossini 
                is ongoing with Chandos; on Bongiovanni 
                (GB 5118-2) he recorded one recital 
                including works by Bellini, Verdi and 
                Persiani and another (GB 5100-2) made 
                up of compositions 
                for piano by Puccini, 
                Giordano and Mascagni. The present CD 
                is the second that Sollini has devoted 
                to Offenbach’s piano works.The first 
                volume was reviewed earlier in these 
                pages (review). 
              
 
              
It will come as no 
                surprise to hear that this is not a 
                disc for those who insist that their 
                music must have intellectual weight 
                or emotional profundity. This is decidedly 
                lightweight, largely superficial, emotionally 
                uninvolved. But it is also witty, sparkling 
                and imbued in every bar with the spirit 
                of the dance. Here are engaging, if 
                not especially distinctive, waltzes, 
                polkas, mazurkas and galops. 
              
 
              
The booklet notes tell 
                us that as a young man Offenbach – always 
                good at self-publicity – contrived to 
                get himself mentioned in a Parisian 
                magazine, Ménestrel, in 
                the following terms: 
              
 
              
This Offenbach regularly 
                composes three waltzes, before breakfast, 
                a mazurka after lunch, and four gallops 
                between two meals. This young wonder 
                asks us to communicate that he has just 
                lost a white handkerchief on which he 
                had scribbled the notes of a waltz composition. 
                A high reward is promised to the person 
                who finds the handkerchief". 
              
 
              
The facility of composition 
                claimed here, while obviously exaggerated, 
                has some truth to it – as reflected 
                in the sheer number of operas he wrote! 
                The piano pieces were not, one suspects, 
                the fruits of great struggles or deliberation. 
                Though precise dates aren’t given it 
                appears that most of the music heard 
                on this CD comes from the period between 
                about 1850 and 1875. These are salon 
                pieces, many of them bearing titles 
                grounded in the details of Offenbach’s 
                personal life – the polka-mazurka ‘Madeleine’ 
                was dedicated to the actress of the 
                Théatre Français, Madeleine 
                Brohan; the ‘Schüler-Pola’ bears 
                the name of the singer Clara Schüler, 
                with whom Offenbach was amorously involved; 
                the suite of waltzes entitled ‘Jacqueline’ 
                honours Offenbach’s daughter; the ‘Herminien-Walzer’ 
                is dedicated to Herminie d’Alcain, the 
                beautiful Spaniard he married in 1844. 
                There is, indeed, a sensuous and amorous 
                quality to much of this music, its exhilarations 
                dedicated to at least two muses, Terpsichore 
                and Erato. 
              
 
              
Occasionally Marco 
                Sollini’s ‘dancing’ at the keyboard 
                seems just a little stiff-limbed, a 
                little too straight-backed as it were; 
                one can imagine more fluid, more insinuatingly 
                amorous readings of some of these pieces. 
                But for the most part these are lively, 
                committed and obviously affectionate 
                performances, and they make for an enjoyable, 
                refreshing programme – even if Offenbach’s 
                writing for the piano doesn’t stimulate 
                the desire for champagne with quite 
                the potency that his best writing for 
                the stage does! 
              
Glyn Pursglove