Clementi: Four Preludes from
Musical Character Pieces, Op. 19; Sonatinas, Op. 36, Nos. 4 and 6; Sonata, Op.
24, No. 2; Piano Duets, Op. 3, No. 1 and Op. 14, No. 3; Sonata for Keyboard
with Flute Accompaniment, Op. 2, No. 3—Rondo. Shuko Watanabe and Timothy
Gaylard, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Chopin: Études, Op. 10; Sergey
Lyapunov: Douze études d’exécution transcendante,
Op. 11—No. 12, “Élegie en memoire de Franz Liszt”;
Liszt: Ballade No. 2; “Ernani”—Paraphrase de concert; Roberto Piana: Après
une Lecture de Liszt. Antonio Pompa-Baldi, piano. Two Pianists Records.
$16.99.
Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Nos. 2,
17 (“The Tempest”) and 26 (“Les Adieux”). James Brawn, piano. MSR Classics.
$14.95.
Spanish Dances: Music of Manuel
de Falla, Enrique Granados, Joaquin Turina, Joaquin Rodrigo, Federico Mompou
and Isaac Albéniz. Brazilian Guitar Quartet. Delos. $16.99.
There is something on the
unusual side about all these piano performances – an indication that for all
its popularity and use in a huge repertoire, the piano still has new areas to
be explored. Certainly the fortepiano does – maybe not new areas, exactly, but ones with which most listeners will not be
familiar. For example, Muzio Clementi (1752-1832), one of the most influential
musicians of his time and for a while considered second only to Haydn as a
composer, was – among many other things – a piano manufacturer. His piano
designs were enormously respected and were responsible for the fact that much
of his own piano music became well-known in his day. But few listeners today
have ever heard a Clementi piano – an opportunity now available thanks to a new
Navona CD featuring Shuko Watanabe and Timothy Gaylard. The two offer various
Clementi selections, as individuals and duo pianists, on an 1814 fortepiano
from the Clementi factory (one of only seven known to have survived). It is
fascinating to hear what is clearly a transitional instrument, not as light or
delicate as the best fortepianos of earlier times but by no means as
structurally imposing and resonant as full-fledged instruments to come.
Clementi’s music, likewise, is pleasant and invariably well made – he was a
solid and substantial composer, if not a particularly innovative one – and all
the works here lie well for pianists (even ones who are not virtuoso
performers) and sound quite good on this instrument. One unusual piece here –
only part of a piece, unfortunately – is the Sonata for Keyboard with Flute Accompaniment, Op. 2, No. 3, in
which Watanabe is the pianist and is joined by Byron W. Petty on flute. Not a
flute-and-piano sonata as much as a piano work with flute obbligato, this piece is more intriguing than most of the others
here, which are generally straightforward. But there are missed opportunities
beyond the inclusion of only one movement of this sonata. The biggest one is
the presentation of only four pieces from what the disc calls Clementi’s Musical Character Pieces (more usually
referred to as Musical
Characteristics). Two of those heard here are in Haydn’s style and
two are in Mozart’s, but there is a great deal more to this work, which is one
of Clementi’s most interesting. Written in 1787, it contains two preludes and a
cadenza written in the style of each of many famous musical personalities of
the late 18th century: Leopold Kozeluch, Johann Sterkel, Johann
Baptist Wanhal, and Clementi himself, in addition to Haydn and Mozart. Exploring
this work on a Clementi fortepiano would be particularly interesting musically;
the excerpts here will whet listeners’ appetite for more. As a
once-over-lightly chance to hear some Clementi on an authentic instrument, this
disc is welcome, but it could have been truly outstanding with a more-careful
choice of pieces.
The repertoire selection is exceptionally careful on a new CD
featuring Antonio Pompa-Baldi, but whether the works really go together well
will be a matter of taste and opinion. The Two Pianists Records release is
intriguingly titled, including an ellipsis, “After a Reading of…Liszt!” That
title refers not only to the rather inconsequential Après une Lecture de Liszt by Roberto Piana (born 1971) but
also, and more significantly, to Liszt’s own Après une Lecture du Dante: Fantasia quasi Sonata, often simply
called the Dante Sonata. But this work itself does not appear on
Pompa-Baldi’s recording, although it could certainly have been included – it
runs about 17 minutes, and could have substituted for Liszt’s Ballade No. 2,
which here runs just over 14. For some reason, though, the approach of this CD
uses Ballade No. 2 and the Ernani paraphrase rather than Liszt’s
reaction to Dante’s Divine Comedy, and this decision undercuts the thematic
unity of the disc. This is not to take away from the performance itself:
Pompa-Baldi does a very fine job with everything here, from the Chopin Études
that come across as the CD’s major offering, to the Liszt and Piana works, to
Lyapunov’s monumental Élegie, a highly impressive piece
that opens the CD and may make listeners wish that Pompa-Baldi had presented
Lyapunov’s full Op. 11 rather than the much-better-known Chopin. All in all, this
disc is quite well played, with the Chopin and Lyapunov being particularly
impressive; it is also well planned, clearly intending to extend Liszt’s own
musical reaction to Dante into a set of musical reactions to Liszt himself. The
result, though, is a touch too clever for its own good.
James Brawn’s latest
“Beethoven Odyssey” CD – the third in this series – is not unusual in the same
way as the Clementi and Liszt-focused discs. After all, innumerable pianists
have had things to say, verbally and in writing as well as at the keyboard,
about Beethoven’s piano sonatas. There are nevertheless a couple of
particularly interesting elements to this MSR Classics offering. One is the
choice of sonatas: plenty of recordings include The Tempest and Les Adieux,
but Brawn pairs them with the comparatively underplayed Sonata No. 2 in A, Op.
2, No. 2. It turns out that No. 2 is a longer work than either of the others,
with a particularly substantial first movement. And while it is clearly in
Beethoven’s early style – it dates to 1795 – this sonata already contains
elements whose gestural, harmonic and rhythmic approach look ahead to The Tempest of 1801-02 and even to Les Adieux of 1809-10. One of the more
difficult things to do in Beethoven is to play the early works as if the late
ones had not yet been written – to eschew familiarity with where the composer
would later go and thus try to replicate the effects he was looking for at the
time he wrote the pieces. Brawn is not fully successful at this – Sonata No. 2
is not quite as big and
forward-looking as he makes it out to be – but by and large, his controlled
expressiveness serves the music well, not only in No. 2 but in all the sonatas
here. And the sonic environment helps, too: it is the other especially worthy
element of this recording, allowing Brawn both warmth and expansiveness that,
together, produce an intimacy in his performances approximating that of a small
recital hall rather than (as often in recordings of Beethoven sonatas) a large
concert space.
The piano literature is, of
course, rich in transcriptions and arrangements, of which Liszt’s Ernani paraphrase is an example. But
piano music itself is transcribed and arranged for other instruments, too, and
the aural results can be fascinating, as in some offerings on a Delos CD
featuring the Brazilian Guitar Quartet and simply called Spanish Dances. What listeners get here is nearly an hour and a
quarter of arrangements by Tadeu do Amaral drawn from familiar and less-familiar
territory. There are the Cuatro Piezas
Españolas (Aragonesa, Cubana, Montañesa, Andaluza) and
the Danza Española No. 2 from La Vida Breve by Manuel de Falla; El fandango de candil and El pelele from Enrique Granados’ Goyescas; and the Zapateado from Joaquin Turina’s Tres
Danzas Andaluzas. Also here are Joaquin Rodrigo’s Sonada de Adiós, which is his homage to Paul
Dukas, and Cuatro Piezas: Caleseras;
Fandango del ventorrillo; Plegaria de la Infanta de Castilla; and Danza valenciana. Federico Mompou is
represented by four of his Cançons
i Danses: Nos. 1, 3, 6 and 8. And the disc concludes with Azulejos by Isaac Albéniz as completed by Granados. The
works chosen clearly reflect the disc’s title, and listeners enamored of
Spanish music will find much to enjoy here. However, despite the cleverness of
the arrangements and the very fine ensemble (and solo) playing by the quartet
members (Clemer Andreotti, Luiz Mantovani, Everton Gloeden, and Amaral), the
guitar simply does not have the richness and variability throughout its range
that the piano possesses, and more than once when hearing a work originally
written for piano, it sounds as if something rhythmic or sonic is lacking. The
guitar is in many ways a quintessentially Spanish instrument, but a comparatively
small amount of it – even of four of them – goes a rather long way. The great
solo classical guitarists – Andrès
Segovia, Julian Bream, John Williams, Christopher Parkening and others – can
captivate through their sheer instrumental mastery and their ability to call
forth a wide variety of sounds as well as intriguing rhythms from the guitar.
Some of that is lost in a four-guitar ensemble, for all that all four players
here are highly skilled. The CD has many attractive individual moments, but is
one of those that are better listened to in small bites rather than devoured
enthusiastically all at once.
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