There is obviously some scope for confusion here,
with two almost identical CDs - same cover photo, same title, same pianist,
almost the same catalogue number - released together by Steinway &
Sons.
In fact, 90016 is effectively a CD single, featuring Lara Downes' reading
of Korngold's Piano Sonata no.2, whilst 30016 is a 'concept' album as
part of which Downes plays the first movement only.
According to Steinway & Sons, the all-Korngold disc is only available
as a digital download, but ArkivMusic for one are selling it - very
cheaply - as a physical CD.
The main disc is "the result of a moment of inspiration after hearing
a lovely little piece entitled Tango from the Exiles' Café. Downes
fantasized about this café and created a narrative around it,
which she describes as 'both real and metaphorical.' This album captures
the pain, nostalgia, and freedom that are indelibly tied to this state
of being - in exile."
There is something faintly spurious about this exile concept: these
are not all "composers who were prevented from returning to their homeland",
as the blurb has it, and some were not even in exile when their contributions
were written. Accepting therefore a more liberal definition of the term,
Downes' recital is at heart a stroll down memory lane, contemplative
and a little bluesy/jazzy - revisiting "vanished worlds", certainly,
but little in the way of
Weltschmerz, as one review of this disc
claims. Rather than conjuring up any sense of loss or even tragedy -
characteristics that might be expected to result from ejection or banishment
- Downes' programme generates feelings of ease and warmth that are associated
with the enjoyment of refreshments on a café terrace or pavement
on a balmy summer's afternoon.
According to the label, Downes has been "acclaimed as one of the leading
innovators in reinventing the chamber and solo piano show", but here
she slips back into the old ways of simply playing widely appealing
music with feeling and poise. On the other hand, there are no great
challenges here to a pianist of her calibre, and it seems efforts have
been made to keep the character of these always atmospheric miniatures
even - hence the fairly narrow register, dynamics and tempi, and a range
of composers who were nearly all contemporaries.
There is however an abundance of unhurried, lilting charm on Downes'
part, an almost uninterrupted flow of lovely melody and lush harmonies
from her composers, all enhanced by a finely engineered sound from Steinway.
In some respects, Korngold's Second Piano Sonata deserves a CD to itself,
being such an amazing work to come from a 13-year-old's mind. Its
fin-de-siècle
character and Downes' relatively
dégagé pace means
that it would not have been entirely out of place on the main disc,
and could indeed have been accommodated with the cutting of no more
than one short piece from that programme. There are several good recordings
of the work already, not least Martin Jones' on Nimbus, part of a four-disc
complete piano works (
NI5705),
but Downes' relaxed approach, in combination with a low price and good
Steinway audio, make this one a worthwhile consideration.
Byzantion
Contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk
Full track-list of 30016:
Béla BARTÓK (1881-1945)
3 Hungarian Folksongs from the Csík District, Sz. 35a [3:12]
Frédéric CHOPIN (1810-1849)
Mazurka in F sharp minor, op.6 no.1 [3:31]
Mazurka in F minor, op.68 no.4 [2:12]
Sergei PROKOFIEV (1891-1953)
Pastoral Sonatina in C, op.59 no.3 [4:58]
Bohuslav MARTIN Ů (1890-1959)
Dumka no.2, H.250 [2:25]
Dumka no.3, H.285bis [1:40]
Igor STRAVINSKY (1882-1971)
Tango in D minor [3:02]
Sergei RACHMANINOFF (1873-1943)
Prelude in D minor, op. posth. [3:04]
Fragments, op. posth. [2:03]
Kurt WEILL (1900-1950) (arr. Jed Distler)
Lost in the Stars [4:27]
Erich KORNGOLD (1897-1957)
Moderato (from: Piano Sonata no.2, op.2) [8:48]
William Grant STILL (1895-1958)
Land of Romance (from: Africa) [6:53]
Peter BOWLES (1910-1990)
Prelude no.1 [1:44]
Prelude no.2 [1:00]
Prelude no.3 [1:24]
Prelude no.6 [1:50]
Michael SAHL (b.1944)
Tango from the Exiles’ Café [3:48]
Darius MILHAUD (1892-1974)
Rag Caprice no.2 [1.50]
Mohammed FAIROUZ (b.1985)
Piano Miniature no.6, 'Addio' [2:18]