Debussy: Préludes for Piano, Books I and II
(complete).
Terry Lynn Hudson, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95 (2 CDs).
Debussy: Suite Bergamasque; Ballade; Pour le Piano;
Arabesque No. 1; Images, Books I and II. Eliane Rodrigues, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Mother: A Musical Tribute. Elizabeth Joy Roe and Greg
Anderson, pianos. SWR Music. $18.99.
Although there is no musical reason to
perform all 24 of Debussy’s Préludes for
Piano as a set – unlike similar works by Bach and Chopin, Debussy’s do not
follow a specific tonal sequence – the full grouping is a tour de force for pianists and produces an intriguingly involving
effect on listeners who hear the works from start to finish, or at least listen
to Book I straight through and subsequently to all of Book II. The connections
among these works are subtle rather than structurally dictated – for example,
the works in the first book, from 1910, are more directly impressionistic,
while those in the second, from 1913, delve more deeply into strictly musical
issues of their time, such as dissonances and tonal ambiguity. Terry Lynn
Hudson’s exemplary reading of both books of Préludes,
a two-CD set from MSR Classics that is being sold for the price of a single
disc, is an excellent introduction to the music for anyone unfamiliar with it –
and stands up very well against other recordings, for those who know the
material already. Hudson is especially adept at gently evoking Debussy’s scenes
of quietude and sadness, notably in Brouillards
(“Mists,” which opens the second book) and La cathédrale engloutie (”The Sunken Cathedral,” tenth in the first book).
Debussy’s piano music, generally speaking, is subtle and understated, and that
is particularly true of these two pieces and several others in the Préludes. And this is precisely where
Hudson excels. She does not over-sentimentalize these pieces and, indeed, does
not over-interpret the ones that benefit from direct and straightforward
presentation, such as La fille aux
cheveux de lin (“The Girl with Flaxen Hair,” the eighth piece in the first book). If
there is a single word that seems to describe both books of Préludes, it would be “fluidity” – of
expression, or rhythm, of tempo, of coloration, of texture. Hudson is quite
sensitive to this characteristic, with the result that her performance imparts
a certain overarching connectedness among the works even in the absence of a
predetermined relatedness through keys. Hudson also has a keen sense of wit and
humor when those are called for, as in Général
Lavine – eccentric (the cakewalk-like sixth piece in the second book). By any measure,
these are neatly tied-up performances, both of individual pieces as miniatures
and as an entire set of 24 little pianistic gems.
Debussy’s piano music is also handled with
style and sensitivity on a new Navona CD featuring Eliane Rodrigues. The
contrasts among the six pieces in the two books of Images are
particularly effective here. The books of Images date to 1905 and 1907
and are, like the two books of Préludes, somewhat different in
focus, the first being more readily accessible and the second denser and more
complex both to play and to hear. On the basis of this disc, Rodrigues sees
Debussy as a composer whose piano music is filled with contrasts: she brings
out the works’ differing moods strongly, again and again. Thus, the four
movements of Suite Bergamasque (1890-1905) are filled with a mixture of
feelings – and yes, the mix specifically appears in the third, longest and most
familiar, Clair de lune, which for Rodrigues presents a feeling of being
bereft and uncertain in the moonlight, not simply experiencing enjoyment of the
beauties of the landscape below the bright orb. All the works here get
sensitive, thoughtful treatment, from the earliest, Arabesque No. 1
(1888-1891) to the later Ballade (1890-1903) and Pour le Piano
(1896-1903). The CD is a generous length, nearly an hour and a quarter, which
explains a decision that is unlikely to please listeners who prefer the CD medium
to online music: Rodrigues also offers a lovely, lilting and thoroughly
enjoyable version of the Children’s Corner suite, but it is available
only online – its 16 minutes would not quite have fit onto the CD with
everything already on it. Listeners may decide for themselves whether they
would have preferred to have something else omitted and Children’s Corner
included on the disc, where it would have been the latest work offered (it
dates to 1908). Even without the bonus, though, this is a CD that lovers of
Debussy will enjoy, especially insofar as Rodrigues views some of the music,
such as Clair de lune, in atypical ways.
A new SWR Music recording featuring the
Anderson & Roe piano duet offers two pianos and two pianists rather than
one of each, but that is scarcely to the CD’s benefit, despite the performers’
excellent playing. The reason is that this is one of those “theme” discs and is
also a very deliberate crossover recording – and is therefore only for people
who accept and enjoy the topic (the disc’s title is “Mother: A Tribute”) and
who also are comfortable with the rather weird juxtapositions that the
performers offer. Listeners to this (+++) recording should be prepared to hear
Dvořák
(“Songs My Mother Taught Me”) immediately followed by an excerpt from Queen’s
1975 “A Night at the Opera,” succeeded by Rachmaninoff’s Suite No. 1 for Two
Pianos, followed by a rendition of Simon & Garfunkel’s “Mrs. Robinson” –
and so forth. There is Grieg’s “A Mother’s Grief” and then “What a Wonderful
World” by Bob Thiele and George David Weiss – the juxtapositions of meaning are
as strange here as are those of music. Schubert’s (perhaps inevitable) “Ave
Maria” is followed by the Lennon/McCartney “Let It Be,” then the (definitely
inevitable) Brahms “Lullaby,” and finally a version of the humming chorus from Madame
Butterfly, in which the a cappella singing group Accent cooperates
to produce a jazzy recasting of the music that is somewhat at odds with the
emotional underpinnings of Puccini’s original. The point of this whole release
is to mix genres in such a way as to fulfill the CD’s title, and also create a
tribute to the pianists’ own mothers, whose preferences are partly responsible
for the choice of works to record. That makes this a nice family project, for
sure; and Elizabeth
Joy Roe and Greg Anderson are both fine performers who seem to relish all the
material and who handle the works with sensitivity and enthusiasm.
Nevertheless, the disc is one of very limited appeal, because for listeners to
enjoy it, they have to like these specific mother-oriented works in these
specific arrangements, presented in this specific way. Only people who are
closely in tune with or tuned into the pianists (so to speak) will be likely to
appreciate this particular “tribute” CD and come to it as an audience with the
same enthusiasm that Anderson and Roe bring to it as performers.
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