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World Keys – Virtuoso Piano Music A. Adnan SAYGUN (1907-1991)
Sketch on Aksak Rhythm – from Ten Sketches on Aksak Rhythms
No.10 Op.58 (1976) [1:28] Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
Piano Sonata No.3 in A minor Op.28 (1907/1917) [7:19] Dia SUCCARI (b.1938)
La Nuit du Destin (1978) [10:53] Halim EL-DABH (b.1921)
Sayera – from Makta in the Art of Kita (1955) [1:37] Qigang CHEN (b.1951)
Instants d’un opéra de Pékin (2000) [6:51] Franz LISZT (1811-1886)
Concert Paraphrase of Verdi’s Rigoletto (1859) [6:37] William BOLCOM (b.1938)
…
la belle rouquine – from Nine Bagatelles (1996) [1:43] Peter SCULTHORPE (b.1929)
Nocturnal (1983/89) [6:30] Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
Piano Sonata No.2 in G minor Op.22 (1833/38) [18:02] Peteris VASKS (b.1946)
Kantate (1980) [5:00]
Joel Fan
(piano)
rec. Bayside Performing Arts Centre, San Mateo, CA, January
2006 REFERENCE
RECORDINGS RR-106 [67:00]
This
is more than a merely quixotic selection; it positively shouts
iconoclasm and fresh thinking. Joel Fan has cast a metaphorical
net wide and his catch ranges through the centuries and across
the globe. Thus we encounter the Turkish Akask, the
Arabian maqam and Peking Opera. Counterpointing these
are nineteenth century western classics in the shape of Schumann
and Liszt. It all makes for rather unlikely but diverting
listening especially when one realises that Joel Fan has
chosen the G minor Schumann sonata, a work that dwarfs its
companions in both size and distinction.
Part
of the reason that so many of the works are short is that
they’re extracted from larger spans. Saygun’s Ten Sketches are
represented only by the last, a pentatonic and galvanising
ninety-second introduction to the disc. Naturally it only
makes one want to hear the other nine. Succari’s La Nuit
du Destin shows the Syrian composer’s absorption in folk
music of the Near East. The resonant and incantatory gestures
embrace a distinctive sonority rooted in Persian and Arabian
music but there are also hints of another lineage as well
in the more liquid, cool Ravelian muse. The brief improvisatory
sections – called taksim – are especially potent in
this performance, and the piece intoxicates throughout its
ten-minute length.
The
Egyptian Halim El-Dabh is represented by Sayera, which
comes from his 1955 piece Makta in the Art of Kita. This
is another ninety-second movement but one can still gauge
enough to note the powerful percussive attacks as they try
to assail a simple drone figure. Qigang Chen’s piece has
a Francophile title - Instants d’un opéra de Pékin – and
is full of dynamic contrasts and pentatonic motifs. William
Bolcom moves things into more chartered territory though
whether one of his Bagatelles (one hundred seconds long)
will slake the thirst is debatable. It’s too piquant for
me. Sculthorpe’s Nocturnal is sunlight-dappled and
richly evocative. Vasks’ 1980 Kantate has hymnal purity,
bell peals and moments of reflective and fractious outburst;
it ends with beneficent and simple chords, deeply rooted
and calming.
The
Prokofiev Third Sonata is dispatched with virtuosic aplomb
and the Schumann is perhaps more impressive in the Andantino
than in the surrounding movements, well played though they
are. Here he seems to locate the right colour and weight.
In the first movement he lacks something of, say, Gilels’s
leonine drama. With Liszt’s concert paraphrase to add undeniable
chops to the disc, Fan completes a wide-ranging, slightly
odd, occasionally unsatisfying but always eventful programme.
If the single extracts tempt you to explore further afield
then Fan’s net will not have been cast wide in vain.