Busoni: Sonatina Seconda; Nine Variations on a
Chopin Prelude; Elegies. Svetlana Belsky, piano. Ravello. $14.99.
Luigi Perrachio: Nove Poemetti; 25 Preludi. David Korevaar, piano. MSR
Classics. $12.95.
Music for Solo Piano and Percussion Instruments by
John Dante Prevedini, John A. Carollo, Robert E. Thomas, Willem Van Twillert,
and Daniel Adams. Karolina Rojahn and Lucie Kaucká,
piano; Matt Sharrock, marimba and vibraphone; McCormick Percussion Group
conducted by Robert McCormick. Navona. $14.99.
The piano music on several recent recordings will scarcely be to all
listeners’ taste – even piano enthusiasts will not necessarily enjoy all of it
– but anyone looking to expand his or her ears a bit through encountering
less-familiar pianistic material will find plenty here that is enjoyable,
challenging to explore, or both. Svetlana Belsky offers a fascinating tour of
some of the notoriously difficult, complex, unclassifiable-as-to-style music of
Busoni on a new Ravello CD. Sonatina
Seconda (1912), although as brief as its name implies (nine minutes), is
crammed with technical challenges and auditory ones as well. Dissonance and
intensity are contrasted, seemingly arbitrarily, with march tunes and delicate,
almost magical passages, the whole ending with a distinctly odd sound. Nine Variations on a Chopin Prelude is
both earlier and later, the original version dating to 1884 (when Busoni was
only 18) and the final one, heard here, to 1922. Again the technical demands of
the music are enormous, and the relationship of what Busoni wrote to Chopin’s famous
C Minor Prelude is not always apparent. The most interesting addition to the
1922 version is an introduction that is both fugal and atonal – a bit of
structural cleverness equal to that of the variations themselves, which appear
in three groups of three, each individual variation in turn subdivided into
three parts. Belsky, who thoroughly plumbs the depths of this music, does a
particularly fine job of highlighting the distinctions among the sections of
the variations while also paying attention to the overall structure of Busoni’s
work. This is as insightful a reading in its way as is her performance of Sonatina Seconda in a very different,
broader and more deliberately intense way. Belsky also handles the six Elegies of 1908 remarkably well. These
are highly variegated works that, collectively, look back at Busoni’s previous
late-Romantic style and also at the much more highly personal musical approach
that at this time he had not yet fully developed. Belsky handles these works as
six interconnected yet independent miniatures. No. 1 is the most
straightforward of the group; No. 2 plays major against minor and is based on
Busoni’s earlier Piano Concerto; No. 3 has the distinct sound of its
foundational chorale prelude and looks ahead to the Fantasia contrappuntistica, into which it will later be
incorporated; No. 4 comes from the Turandot
Suite and is a set of variations on Greensleeves,
which is not at all Chinese even though Busoni thought it was; No. 5, from the
same suite, is a very strange sort-of-waltz; and No. 6, a nocturne used in the
opera Die Brautwahl, provides a
conclusion suggesting that the night is anything but uniformly calming. Belsky
seems to have a remarkable intuitive understanding of these Busoni pieces, in
addition to having spent considerable time studying their intricacies and
performance challenges. Her readings are wholly convincing and do a first-rate
job of conveying the many facets of this very difficult composer’s complex and
highly personal piano music.
Even less known than the Busoni works played by Belsky are a number of
miniatures, from roughly the same time period, by Luigi Perrachio. In fact, the
composer himself is almost 100% unknown, and the world première recordings on a new MSR Classics CD will serve as
most of the world’s introduction not only to the music but also to Perrachio
himself. A Turin native – born there in 1883, he died there in 1966 – Perrachio
was apparently a shy, withdrawn man whose life was far more involved with
teaching piano and performing on the instrument at recitals in his native city
than with reaching out beyond Turin’s limits to any wider audience. His most
interesting contribution to Turin’s musical life may have been as director of
the Double Quintet of Turin, an ensemble including a string quintet plus a wind
quintet. Perrachio composed mainly for solo piano, although he did write three
interesting sonatas in the late 1920s (for solo harp, violin and piano, and
string trio), and a piano concerto and violin concerto in the early 1930s. But
he was extremely reluctant to have any of his music published. And very little
of it was. David Korevaar’s rediscovery of this material is therefore something
of a revelation, shining a light on a composer heretofore almost completely
absent from listeners’ consciousness. None of this would matter if Perrachio’s
works were unworthy of performance, but the two groupings offered by Korevaar
are very definitely worthwhile. Nove
Poemetti (1917/1920) includes, as the title indicates, nine sections, and
they are more substantial than might be expected. They are essentially the work
of an Impressionist composer who met Debussy and Ravel in Paris in the 1910s
and was strongly influenced by their music and personalities. Several of the Nove Poemetti are derivative, but by and
large, the pieces contain distinctive elements that mark them as works of their
time but not of France, where Impressionism flourished: Italianate feelings are
recognizable here. Thus, although Notte
and Mare, the last two of these
pieces, are not especially distinctive in style, there are elements elsewhere
in the set – in La notte dei morti
and Danzatrici a Lesbo, for example –
in which Perrachio shines forth with his own voice. There is somewhat less that
is innovative in many of the 25 Preludi
of 1927 – it is easy to see how these pieces, many lasting a minute or less,
would have served Perrachio’s pedagogical purposes – but here too, individual
elements stand out in a recognizable style. For instance, there are
back-to-back preludes marked Molto
tranquillo e semplicissimo, their approach to the identical tempo marking
very nicely contrasted; and there are other preludes whose construction
indicates Perrachio’s particular skill with the delicate and expressive: Allegretto, con grande delicatezza, and Tranquillo, delicato. And then there is
pleasant, often clever contrast between these and preludes marked Agitato; Presto, fantastico; and Vigoroso, elementare. There is nothing
of grand, sweeping scale in this recording, but neither are these pieces
dismissible as mere trifles. They are carefully crafted and, at their best,
thoroughly engaging – more than enough to captivate piano-music lovers and lead
to a hope that Korevaar will uncover and record some larger-scale Perrachio
music.
It is somewhat harder to become deeply engaged in a (+++) Navona
recording featuring works that emphasize the piano as a percussion instrument
and that offers other forms of keyboard percussion as well. The disc is a
hodgepodge by design, containing eight works by five composers; and even when a
composer contributes more than one work, the pieces are separated on the CD,
for no apparent structural or aural reason. John Dante Prevedini’s
three-movement Lyme Sonata – which,
the designation notwithstanding, is shorter than Busoni’s Sonatina Seconda – offers a series of contrasts between jagged and
lyrical sections; that is about all there is to it. John A. Carollo’s Piano Etudes, Book Three (Histories) are
all more extended than any of Perrachio’s Preludes,
although they too are intended as technical tours
de force; but they seem somehow less substantial, more given to gesture
than to genuine exploration. Carollo’s Piano
Suite No. 9 (Memories of Liszt) is more interesting, its five movements
reflecting various sides of Liszt’s style and in one movement giving way to
some rather silly humor that is most welcome amid all the seriousness
elsewhere. Willem Van Twillert’s Andante
for Antoinette is gentle, lyrical and quiet, while his Adagio for Piano has a warmer, richer sound than most other works
on the CD. The Prevedini, Carollo and Van Twillert works are for solo piano.
Scattered around them are the rest of the pieces here. Robert E. Thomas’ short Moto Perpetuo for marimba is constantly
moving and themeless, while his four-movement Sixteen Lines Circling a Square contrasts the sound of the marimba
with that of the vibraphone but is quite directionless and static. Daniel
Adams’ Solstice Introspect is
sonically interesting in being composed for three vibraphones, but Adams does
not do much with the instrumental complement except have the performers play
unrelated passages overlaid on each other, as if each instrument is generally
unaware of the presence of the others. The usual contemporary extensions of
instruments’ natural tones and ranges are also used here, including harmonics
and bowing, but while they add some unusual sounds to the piece, they do
nothing to give it any particular connection with listeners. Fans of
contemporary music will surely deem individual parts of some of the works on this
CD interesting, but the overall disjointed feeling of the assemblage of
material makes it hard to find, much less care about, any connection among the
pieces.
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