Rimsky-Korsakov:
Piano Concerto; Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 2; Alexandre Tsfasman: Jazz
Suite. Zlata Chochieva, piano; BBC
Scottish Symphony Orchestra conducted by Karl-Heinz Steffens. Naïve. $16.99.
Chopin:
Nocturnes, Op. 9, No. 1; Op. 15, No. 2; Op. 27, Nos. 1-2; Op. 62, Nos. 1-2;
Debussy: Suite Bergamasque; Preludes—Book I, No. 8; 12 Études—No. 11. Carlos Gardels, piano. MSR Classics. $14.95.
Pianistic virtuosity is pretty much a given in concerts and on
recordings nowadays: there are so many technically adept pianists that it can
be hard to choose among them when they play the same works. This opens the door
for pianists to become distinctive through repertoire choice rather than
technique, and the results can be intriguing, as they are on a new Naïve
recording featuring Zlata Chochieva and the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
under Karl-Heinz Steffens. One of the works on this CD is vastly neglected, one
is almost completely unknown, and one is comparatively familiar – and even
though the three pieces differ substantially in many ways, they turn out to fit
together surprisingly well. Rimsky-Korsakov’s short (15-minute), Lisztian Piano Concerto is very much deserving of
being heard more frequently. It is hard to understand why this ebullient, very
well-scored, highly virtuosic display piece is such a rarity, unless perhaps
because of its comparative superficiality and somewhat dated-sounding grand
gestures, especially in its central section: it is a single-movement work but
divided into sections that are, in effect, separate movements. Chochieva and
Steffens attack the concerto for all it is worth, and while its musical merit
may be debatable, its entertainment value really is not: it sweeps listeners
along skillfully from start to finish, combining its elements derived from
Liszt (to whom it is dedicated) with distinctly Russian material – it is built
around a single theme that Rimsky-Korsakov took from Balakirev’s 1866 folk-song
collection. What the concerto lacks in profundity it more than makes up for in
the sheer delight of its structure and pianistic expectations, all of which
Chochieva fulfills admirably. It is followed on this disc by the Prokofiev, which
the composer famously rewrote in 1923 after the score of the original (written
a decade earlier) was destroyed following the Russian Revolution. This makes
the rewritten concerto 40 years newer than Rimsky-Korsakov’s; it is also more
than twice as long and even more technically challenging. But there is an
underlying “Russianness” here that, it turns out, complements the earlier work
to a surprising degree. Prokofiev is considerably more intense and serious in
this concerto than Rimsky-Korsakov is in his, and the technical challenges are
of a different sort – the brief second movement, in particular, is an unusual
kind of perpetuum mobile that is
quite difficult to bring off successfully, making Chochieva’s handling of it
particularly impressive. This is an unrelenting concerto, with its discordant
first movement, its third-movement Intermezzo
presenting an air of menace, and its nearly manic finale – there is no slow
movement and barely any respite for pianist or audience. Chochieva and Steffens
are at their best in the aptly labeled concluding Allegro tempestoso, wherein the piano and orchestra have at best an
uneasy relationship in a movement of tremendous complexity and sonic range. The
Prokofiev is followed here by a very different sort of Soviet-era work, the Jazz Suite by Alexandre Tsfasman
(1906-1971). This suite for piano and orchestra dates to about 1945 but harks
back in attitude and comparative brevity to Rimsky-Korsakov, although its
rhythmic bounce is certainly that of jazz and its harmonies reflective of the
20th century. A certain level of Impressionism underlies the work,
whose four movements are titled Snowflakes,
Lyrical Waltz, Polka and Career:
Presto. The work is scarcely deep, but it is exceptionally pleasant, a
highly suitable contrast to the Prokofiev concerto that precedes it here, and a
worthy display piece in its own right. Here Chochieva and Steffens show
themselves adept with what is essentially “light music,” turning from the
intensity of the Prokofiev and the warm sound of the Rimsky-Korsakov to an
altogether more-straightforward example of piano-and-orchestra display that is
every bit as satisfying, in its way, as the other pieces on this first-rate CD
are in theirs.
The pianism is equally skillful but the choice of material less interesting on an MSR Classics CD featuring Carlos Gardels. There is nothing the slightest bit “wrong” about a pianist presenting a recital of miscellany composed by Chopin and Debussy – but the works heard here are so well-known, so often played by so many performers in so many contexts, that it is a challenge to have anything new to say about them, musically speaking. Gardels does not: he performs with sensitivity and technical adeptness, and engages more than satisfactorily with the music, but ultimately provides no particular new insight into it. The smattering of Chopin nocturnes is pleasant enough, as is the case for pretty much any set of selections of these warmly crepuscular works; and Gardels handles the music with considerable feeling, with Op. 62, No. 2 being especially heartfelt. There is, however, nothing unique or especially revelatory in his approach, nor any reason for the choice of these specific works to be heard in this specific sequence – except, of course, as a reflection of the pianist’s personal taste. That is justification enough for the material chosen, but it tends to limit the potential audience to listeners whose own preferences parallel those of Gardels. The Debussy material, for all its familiarity, comes across somewhat more successfully, with the more-upbeat portions of Suite Bergamasque being a welcome change from the similar pacing of the foundational beauties of the Chopin miniatures. Clair de lune, however, is a bit of a disappointment, with Gardels giving it a stop-and-start quality that somewhat undermines the mood. The two other Debussy works are, in effect, encores. The prelude (“The Girl with the Flaxen Hair”) is suitably sweet and gentle, while the étude (“Pour les arpèges composes”) is a gently cascading and sensitively played set of arpeggios. Everything is nicely handled on this recording, but it remains a (+++) disc for its somewhat monochromatic choice of material, and because everything Gardels offers is so commonly heard, so familiar, that the CD is mainly worth considering for someone who is just starting a classical-CD collection and does not yet have a recording (or several recordings) of this very-well-known music.
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