Gershwin:
Rhapsody in Blue; Piano Concerto in F; Bernstein: Symphonic Dances from “West
Side Story.” Eliane Rodrigues and
Nina Smeets, pianos; Carlo Willems and Koen Wilmaers, percussion. Navona.
$14.99.
Debussy:
Suite bergamasque and other piano music.
Jerry Wong, piano. MSR Classics. $12.95.
Sulkhan
Tsintsadze: 24 Preludes for Piano.
Inga Fiolia, piano. Grand Piano. $17.99.
Piano
Music of George Rochberg, Michael Anderson, Leo Brouwer, Ellen Taaffe Zwilich,
Phillip Evans, Almeida Prado, Thomas L. McKinley, and John Sharpley. Roberta Rust, piano. Navona. $14.99.
Sometimes one must dare greatly in order to succeed wonderfully – and to
take solace when one falls short, simply because one has tried to do so much. The
immensely dramatic and dynamic new Navona CD of music by Gershwin and Bernstein
– arranged, improbably and often marvelously, for two pianos and percussion –
is so inventive and filled with such sheer joie
de vivre that even the places where it does not quite work are ones worth
hearing. Experiencing, rather: there is more here than just some acoustic dabbling.
Eliane Rodrigues and Nina Smeets did their own two-piano arrangements of all
the music here, with their collaborators and co-performers Carlo Willems and
Koen Wilmaers handling the percussion arrangement of Rhapsody in Blue and playing an arrangement of the Piano Concerto in F by Thomas Schindl
and one of the Bernstein dances by Peter Sadlo, based on an earlier arrangement
by John Musto. A little suspension of musical disbelief is in order here for
all listeners: to start with, is it really possible to make an effective
piano-and/or-percussion version of the wailing clarinet opening of Rhapsody in Blue? Well, no. But right at
the start of this piece, right at the start of this disc, what the
performer/arrangers are trying to do becomes clear: they are bringing out and
emphasizing certain elements of Gershwin’s and Bernstein’s familiar scores,
carefully choosing what to include and what to omit or look past, and in so
doing are turning the arrangements themselves into unusual and remarkably
involving interpretations of the music. Then they are performing – that is,
interpreting – the arrangements that interpret the originals, turning this
whole CD into a kind of “meta-interpretation.” Not that anything loftily
philosophical seems to be going on here: the overall impression of all the
performances is that the players had tremendous fun doing them, resulting in
infectiously joyous, sometimes over-the-top readings that capture all the verve
and jazziness of Gershwin’s and Bernstein’s creations. Caution, though: “verve
and jazziness” do abound here, but tenderness and quietude do not come across
so well. The arrangements and performances are at their best by far in the
upbeat, brash and heavily jazz-inflected elements of the scores. In the
quieter, more-restrained and more-lyrical passages, matters are somewhat less
satisfactory. Thus, Rhapsody in Blue
is an absolute smash, a truly wonderful performance that breaks all sorts of
bounds and rules while adhering to Gershwin’s spirit to an exemplary degree. It
is so good that it is difficult to hear the original version of this work
immediately after listening to the one recorded here without finding the
original a trifle pale. What an accomplishment: certainly the
Rodrigues/Smeets/Willems/Wilmaers version is not better than Gershwin’s original, but it is so different in sound
and emphasis, yet so true to the spirit of Rhapsody
in Blue, that lovers of the original really owe it to themselves to hear
how fascinatingly this rethinking shines new light on many elements of the
score. The Bernstein dances, placed next on the CD, are not quite an unalloyed
triumph, but they have a great many high points. Mamba, Cha-cha and (unsurprisingly) Rumble come off especially well, while Cool is something of an unexpected hit: its mere 40 seconds seem
far too few to contain all the classy, irreverent sound of this arrangement.
Much less successful, predictably, is Somewhere,
always a somewhat saccharine (if effective) element of Bernstein’s score, and
one that does not take well to this instrumental combination even when the
playing is as sensitive as it is here. The Finale
is also underwhelming, lacking the emotional punch of Bernstein’s original –
but, again, it is very well and sensitively played. And then comes Gershwin’s Piano Concerto in F, a decidedly mixed
bag. Parts of it are simply wonderful in their exuberance, and the finale is a tour de force for everyone involved,
building to a genuine bang-up ending. And in the first movement, the sections
just for the two pianos display some marvelous camaraderie between Rodrigues
and Smeets. The second movement, though, never gels. The multiple-keyboard arrangement
of the opening is clever but never fully convincing, and the remainder of this
lovely movement seems always to cry out for sounds beyond those of which
percussion – however well-played – is capable. The amazing opening of the
finale, though, instantly throws away any misgivings, and the concerto builds
to a conclusion that is every bit as convincing as the arrangement here of Rhapsody in Blue. Triumph in music does
not require perfection: if not everything here works, what does succeed does so to an overwhelming degree. What a CD!
The pleasures are of a somewhat more conventional sort but are no less
welcome on a new MSR Classics release featuring a selection of Debussy piano
music played by Jerry Wong. Except for Suite
bergamasque, nothing here is “complete” – Wong curates the album by
presenting various Debussy works in such a way as to expand upon each other’s
moods or provide contrasts. The approach will not be to all tastes, but the
clean and unfussy playing ought to be: Wong does not overindulge anything in
this music, but presents it in a manner that is not so much straightforward as
it is carefully considered. The CD bears the somewhat misleading title, “Of
Motion and Dance” – yes to the former, but not so much to the latter,
especially when compared to dances by, say, Bernstein. Debussy certainly used
the names of dances for some of the pieces heard here – indeed, except for the
every-popular Clair de lune, each
movement of Suite bergamasque bears
the title of a Baroque dance. But none of the suite’s movements is particularly
danceable, and Wong certainly does not attempt to make them so: he simply
accepts the underlying dance rhythms when Debussy provides them, and uses them
to being forth Debussy’s elegant little musical portraits. There are no fewer
than 14 other pieces on the CD, eight before Suite bergamasque and six afterwards. Most of those in the group of
eight are chosen from Book I of the Préludes or
from Children’s Corner, and the
juxtapositions highlight Wong’s sensitivity to this music and the care with
which he assembles this recital. For example, the liveliness of La danse de Puck is immediately followed
by the oddly titled and rather ominous-sounding Berceuse héroique (“Heroic Lullaby”), which in turn is followed by Jimbo’s Lullaby (for a toy elephant), in
which Wong suitably brings forth the humor as well as the warmth of expression.
In the six pieces at the end of the CD, dances as reimagined by Debussy make
several appearances, again to good contrasting effect. Thus, the frenzy of Tarantelle Styrienne is neatly followed,
to conclude the disc, with two cakewalks: Minstrels
from the first book of Préludes and Général Lavine – eccentric from the second. Both in the choice of material to
perform and in the sensitive, studied-but-not-academic way in which he performs
it, Wong shows himself well-attuned to the subtleties of Debussy’s piano music
and proves himself a fine exponent of it.
The 24 Preludes for Piano (1971)
by noted Georgian composer Sulkhan Tsintsadze (1925-1991) are quite
different from Debussy’s and far less familiar. But on the basis of a fine new
Grand Piano recording of this set, they deserve to be better known.
German-Georgian pianist Inga Fiolia performs them with considerable flair. Like
many other, better-known sets of preludes, they are studies in key sequence we
well as in pianism: the first is in C major, the second in A minor (the
minor-key, no-accidentals equivalent); then come G major and E minor, then D
major and B minor, and so on. But Tsintsadze does not explore any particular
characteristics of individual keys in structuring this set. Instead, perhaps
with an eye toward the realpolitik of
Soviet times that was still a force to be reckoned with nearly two decades
after Stalin’s death, Tsintsadze chooses folk and folklike tunes for the
preludes, adheres almost always to tonality or mild dissonance, and presents rhythms
that clearly show the dance forms in which some of the thematic material
originated (although these preludes are no more danceable than Debussy’s). Indeed,
Tsintsadze was well-regarded in the Soviet era and was even awarded the USSR
Stalin Prize. Yet his father had been arrested during Stalin’s purge of 1937,
and this must surely have left a strong impression on the then-preteen boy, who
at the time was already studying in a school for highly gifted children (as a
cellist). The extent to which the early events influenced Tsintsadze’s
compositions in general and the 24
Preludes for Piano in particular is at best conjectural, but certainly
there is nothing in this music that would in any way have jeopardized the
composer’s position at the Tbilisi State Conservatory, of which he was head at
the time he wrote the cycle. It would be overstating things to claim that this
is profound or revelatory music, or to single out individual preludes among the
24 as especially noteworthy. Indeed, this set is notable for the way in which
the preludes, although thematically unconnected, flow naturally – in Fiolia’s
performance – from one to the next, giving the impression of a kind of grand
suite celebrating the dances and folk music of Georgia. Although the music’s
value is insufficient to give this CD the highest rating, it is certainly
enough to designate this a strong (+++) release that will be of considerable
interest to listeners who know little of Soviet-era music beyond that of the
greatest composers of that time – and who know even less about 20th-century
music from the onetime Soviet republic of Georgia.
The connection of heritage
between Fiolia and Tsintsadze, although significant, is less immediate and
personal than the connections that permeate a new (+++) Navona anthology CD
featuring pianist Roberta Rust. There are eight composers heard here, each
represented by one to three works, and all of them are personally connected to
the pianist – who in turn created the disc as a memorial to her recently
deceased mother and stepdaughter. So a level of strong emotional involvement in
the music is scarcely surprising here – but as a compendium, the CD does not
really hang together very well, since the composers and their works are so very
different. Rust’s own catholicity of taste is evident in her choice of these
pieces, but listeners who simply want to hear her handling of comparatively modern
music (the pieces were composed as far back as 1939 and as recently as 2007)
will find the transitions and juxtapositions rather awkward. George Rochberg’s Blues, the second movement of Carnival Music (1971), opens the CD, and
is followed by two much more recent Michael Anderson works: Thirteen Plus 4 (2005) and the first
movement of Sonata (2008). These
tone-cluster-heavy pieces follow rather uneasily after Rochberg’s rather close
adherence to the bluesy jazz idiom. Next come three pieces by Leo Brouwer, all
from Diez Bocetos (2007; the title
translates as “Ten Sketches”). Two of the three include improvisatory sections
in which Rust chooses to interpolate and interpret material based on Bach – yet
another level of her personal involvement in this recital. Next on the CD is
the somber Lament (1999) by Ellen
Taaffe Zwilich, followed by the earliest music on the disc: Phillip Evans’ Minuetto (1939) and two movements from
his Suite 1945. Evans and Rust
married in 1980, and it is Evans’ late daughter to whom this CD is in part
dedicated. Rust next plays Almeida Prado’s three-part Halley, whose world première performance Rust gave –
the 1986 work was inspired by the return of Halley’s comet that year. Two of
Thomas L. McKinley’s Fantasy Pieces for
Piano (2005) are heard next; the entire work was dedicated to Rust.
Finally, Rust plays three of the Four
Preludes (1998) by John Sharpley. One of these quotes “Yankee Doodle” and
another “Bringing in the Sheaves,” making them somewhat more approachable than
many of the other works here. Rust plays everything on the CD with fine
technique and obvious dedication, but the musical mixture is just too much of a
hodgepodge for the disc to work well for listeners who lack the very strong
personal connections to the music that Rust herself has.
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