CD and Other Review

Review: Rachmaninov: Complete Piano Music (Ashkenazy)

What is there to say about Ashkenazy’s Rachmaninov that has not already been said? As pianist and conductor he has been associated with this composer throughout his career, and on disc from his earliest recital. As a young award-winning pianist and well into middle age, Ashkenazy maintained the big technique necessary to play Rachmaninov (whose large hands could easily stretch a 15th at the piano), coupled with a thoughtful temperament that produced searching and highly musical performances with a lack of over-the-top flamboyance. It is this quality that has made Ashkenazy’s recordings ones to live with. This 11 CD set contains all the composer’s music for piano, two pianos, and piano and orchestra. He recorded some works more than once, so we find the Études Tableaux and the Corelli Variations from both 1974 and 1985/86 (for the former) and 2011 (for the latter). There is also a doubling up of the Suite No 1 for Two Pianos: we get the 1974 recording with Previn, and a later version with the pianist’s son Vovka. Yet strangely enough, Ashkenazy’s celebrated accounts of the piano concertos with Previn and the LSO are not included; instead, recordings with Haitink conducting the Concertgebouw take their……

June 11, 2014
features

New song, hold the text

For his latest vocal work, composer Mark Isaacs decided to skip the poetics Continue reading Get unlimited digital access from $4 per month Subscribe Already a subscriber? Log in

June 3, 2014
CD and Other Review

Review: Bach, Liszt, Mussorgsky, Rachmaninov: James Brawn in Recital

Brilliant pianists tend to be either jaw-dropping virtuosos or they are intensely musical. James Brawn, at 42 years of age, while having the chops at his disposal to negotiate the thundering octaves of Liszt’s Mephisto Waltz No 1 or Mussorgsky’s Great Gate at Kiev belongs in the second category. He is a musician first: you hear it in the clarity of line maintained throughout the extensive variations of Busoni’s monumental arrangement of the Chaconne from Bach’s Violin Partita No 2, the gentle cantabile of Liszt’s Consolation No 3, and the unaffected fluidity of the C Major Prelude from Bach’s Well Tempered Clavier. Brawn was born in England, but spent his early years in New Zealand and Australia, where he first studied piano. He has won many prizes. For a while he returned to Melbourne to teach at Scotch College but in 2010 moved back to the UK to resume his concert career – of which this and two discs of Beethoven sonatas are a product. The title “In Recital” reflects the judiciously chosen program; the disc does not seem to have been recorded live in concert. The centrepiece is the Mussorgsky, where Brawn takes a thoughtful approach. He is more…

May 8, 2014
CD and Other Review

Review: Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos 1-4, Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini (Lisitsa)

Valentina Lisitsa virtually invented herself through social media and is supposedly the most viewed pianist on YouTube. If this is supposed to imbue her with cachet, I’m afraid it’s lost on me. The liner notes in this set read more like a media release, giving us chapter and verse about her doubts and tribulations (as if these were somehow unique to her) and adopt an unduly reverential tone, hardly worthy of a label like Decca. Since she and her husband (with whom she initially attempted a duo pianist career before abandoning it for a solo career) sank their life savings into this project and allegedly paid for the LSO, conductor and venue themselves, one can only wish them luck. One review has described this undertaking as the latter-day equivalent of vanity publishing. Lisitsa mentions that there was no rehearsal and she hadn’t met the conductor before the recording sessions. It shows in the playing – competent, the least one would expect from the LSO, but hardly incandescent. The First and Fourth concertos have never really interested me very much. The Fourth seems to try (unsuccessfully) to incorporate jazz and the slow movement has the misfortune to bear a resemblance to……

August 1, 2013
CD and Other Review

Review: Mahler: Symphony No 1, Rachmaninov: Symphonic Dances

This DVD, recorded at a concert in Singapore’s Esplanade Hall as part of the Orchestra’s 2010 Southeast Asian Australasian tour, brought back fond memories of the same program – Rachmaninov’s Symphonic Dances and Mahler’s First Symphony – of the Berlin Philharmonic’s appearance at the Sydney Opera House, in a what-are-we-going-to-do-with-the-rest-of-our-lives experience. The Rachmaninov work, his 
last orchestral score, has always 
been an enigma, part Slavic
 nostalgia and part darkly sinister 
glamour, with a dash of Hollywood
 glitz. Rattle’s tempo for the juddering introduction is the most dangerously slow I’ve ever heard. In Sydney, I was still so overwhelmed by the sensation of actually having heard them tuning (almost worth 
the ticket price in itself) just a few yards away, that I failed to notice just how slow 
it was, but what better way to experience simultaneously its unique fusion of heft
and finesse? The saxophone solo is just
 the first of countless wonderful moments throughout the spectral waltz and the
 driven finale, where almost any other orchestra would feel pushed to the point of disintegration, instead of simply heightening the tension with complete control and rock-solid ensemble. Herbert von Karajan, chief conductor of the Orchestra for more than 30 years, resisted……

June 24, 2013