Jonathan Ferrucci is back in his home city of Florence, with the seven Toccatas by Bach,in the Harold Acton library now part of the British Institute.
As Jonathan said,’Bach invites you to dance with him’ in these early works inspired by listening to the great organist Buxtehude.An invitation to improvise and ornament in works that do not have a specific formal construction and are very free almost improvised episodes before bursting into flaming showmanship with the sudden eruption of the toccata itself.
Starting with the scintillating C minor and ending with the imperious D major. But what a wonderful surprise the grandeur of the F sharp minor BWV 910 or the very busy knotty twine of the E minor.A kaleidoscope of colour in the opening C minor with a very deliberately paced toccata where the whispered return was as breathtaking as the ecstatic outpouring of glorious exultation of the ending.Ravishing beauty and delicacy of the G major before the popular ditty of the toccata that disappeared into the depths of the Keyboard.What contemplation of the greatly extended D minor.
Jonathan had a whole world in his hands and all with the gentle sunset through the beautiful windows turning Jonathan’s silhouette into a room with a remarkable view indeed . But another Toccata that Jonathan had up his sleeve was truly a breathtaking and exhilarating cleansing of the air .Ravel’s decadent and ravishingly exotic Toccata from a work dedicated to friends sent to their slaughter in the First World War .A whole generation wiped out and denied the better world that Bach had already depicted with mathematical universal genIus.
The Toccatas for Keyboard, BWV 910–916, are seven pieces for clavier written by J S Bach Although the pieces were not originally organized into a collection by Bach himself (as were most of his other keyboard works, such as the Well Tempered Clavier and the English Suites etc.), the pieces share many similarities, and are frequently grouped and performed together under a collective title.
The seven Toccatas by J.S. Bach contain some of the great master’s most joyous keyboard music. The toccatas are youthful, improvisatory, virtuoso works, composed in the aftermath of Bach’s trip in 1705 to Lübeck to hear the great organist and composer Buxtehude.
The toccatas represent Bach’s earliest keyboard compositions known under a collective title.The earliest sources of the BWV 910, 911 and 916 toccatas appear in the Andreas Bach Book ,an important collection of keyboard and organ manuscripts of various composers compiled by Bach’s oldest brother, Johann Christoph between 1707 and 1713. An early version of the BWV 912 (known as the BWV 912a) also exists in another collection compiled by Johann Christoph Bach known as the ‘Moller manuscript’ from around 1703 to 1707.This indicates that most of these works originated no later than Bach’s early Weimar years, though the early northern German style indicates possible Arnstadt origin.
Though the specific instrumentation is not given for any of the works, none of them call for pedal parts and like Bach’s other clavier works, these toccatas are frequently performed on the piano
The actual order of tonight’s performance was C minor BWV.911 – G major BWV. 916 – G minor BWV.915 – E minor BWV.914 – F sharp minor BWV 910 – D minor BWV .913 – D major BWV.912
Last but certainly not least a round table discussion with many experts from institutions around the world ;’Beyond Erasmus’ Musical Education Abroad and Across Institutions………mediated by Roberto Prosedda it can be seen on the Cremona Musica web site .
Just next door was the amazing Jed Distler not only one of the finest critics (with the late Piero Rattalino and Bryce Morrison pianophiles who have no peers). But Jed is also a pianist to be reckoned with as he demonstrated with an eclectic programme where the palette of sounds he found on the Bosendorfer 280 would be the envy of his illustrious colleagues.An ease and ‘ joie de vivre’ that like his great friend Inna Faliks fills the hall with a very special happy atmosphere with supreme intelligence and mastery.Jed had just performed in London Mahler 2nd Symphony in a four hand arrangement together with Gabriele Baldocci a protégée of Martha Argerich.Ever generous he and Inna were taken by Roberto to Rovigo Conservatory where they gave masterclasses immediately after the Cremona Musica Fair.Jed wrote to me this morning exclaiming how impressed he was with Roberto’s students and in particular a young man who had been acting as a volunteer in Cremona and then gave an amazing performance of Cesar Franck ….’one of the best he has ever heard’.
A final afternoon in which many performances overlapped and I was sorry to miss, including a recital by Alessandro Riccardi but I look forward to listening to his CD’s
Having missed completely Atso Almila’s presentation of the ‘Finnish Conducting School’ that we had spoken about over breakfast – I just hope that I can’t catch up with the recordings that were made of the live stream.A man that exudes the simplicity of the truly great I would dearly love to hear all that he has to say about the wonderful Finnish conductors that are taking over as Principal conductors of many of the greatest orchestras of the world .Finally I was able to enjoy some ravishing Debussy from Saya Ota in the Fazioli Concert Hall.Ondine and Feux d’Artifice played with a crystalline clarity and wonderful use of the pedals creating the same magic atmosphere as Carlo Guaitoli had done on this beautiful instrument only 24 hours before.
The entire cast of the Saturday evening concert in the Museo del violino
What a wonder it was at the end of a long day to hear Angelo Fabbrini telling us of his encounters with Michelangeli and Magaloff and to experience the extreme modesty of a man who has symbolised integrity,honesty and passion for so many great pianists of our time as they relied on him to turn their dreams and wishes into a possibility.The greatest of compliments from Magaloff as he came off stage and thanked Fabbrini for allowing him to play without being aware of the mechanics of the piano.Or Michelangeli asking why he had not told him of the birth off his son and would he consider him as Godfather!Michelangeli too asking for the seemingly impossible and Fabbrini replying my name is Angelo not Michel angelo!But Angelo he is knowing that the artist knows what he is looking for and with great respect and much work Fabbrini was always there to provide it.A wonderful man who was crowned with the highest honour of Cremona Musica at the Museo del Violino Saturday evening
The day had begun on the bus taking us from the Hotel in the centre of Cremona to the Exhibition Centre.It was on the bus too that one could encounter the most interesting people in music from every corner of the world .Discussions about conducting with the renowned Finnish conductor Atso Almila in Cremona to talk about the remarkable Finnish Conducting School.Jed Distler telling us in a most amusing way the encounters he has had with musicians via their recorded performances that he writes about and also talks about in his New York Radio programme : ‘Beyond the Keys’.A discussion about pianists and competitions with Eric Schoones of ‘Pianist Magazines’ in the Netherlands.He is here to present the German edition of his book ‘Walking up the Mountain Track :The Zen Way to Enlightened Musicianship’.The title taken from a book that for Glenn Gould was the Bible.Danieli Longo flown in especially from Rio to talk about her teaching experiences in the Conservatory there .Also Paolo Bartolini founder of the Rites of Spring Music Festival on Long Island – Paolo like Roberto was born in Latina and brought up on the Campus Musicale di Latina and the Ghione Theatre in Rome.All this before the gate to the fair opens at ten o’clock!
In the same hall a little later in the day there was another piano duo but this time four hands on one piano.Two beautiful twins,Eleonora and Beatrice Dallagnese,playing the Yamaha concert grand in a programme completely from memory.At only 23 like the Jussen brothers they are dedicating themselves to a duo career playing without the score which gives a freedom to interact as the music evolves so naturally without being tied to the printed page.Some beautifully delicate Schubert with a sense of architectural shape that was the same that they were to demonstrate in the Brahms Schumann Variations op 23.Four of the better know Hungarian dances allowed them to let their hair down,metaphorically speaking ,as they squeezed every bit of charm out of these works that they played with an intoxicating style and rhythmic energy.A fifth Hungarian dance was a present they were happy to share to a very enthusiastic audience.
Carlo Guaitoli’s recital of Debussy included the Second Book of Preludes and were played with great character and ravishing sounds.Has ‘General Levine’ ever signed off so surely?Or ‘Ondine’ getting up to her mischief in such ravishing waters.’Canope’, Fou Ts’ong’s favourite prelude,created such desolation before the beauty and precision of the alternating thirds prelude.’Feux d’Artifice’ was a true tone poem with the Marseillaise rising out of the distant mist at the end after the sheer exhilaration of the fireworks on display.Carlo is now the Artistic Director of the Casagrande Competition and it is good to see the rebirth of such a noble competition by an artist of Carlo’s stature.I remember the first editions in which my teacher Vlado Perlemuter was on the Jury together with Paul Badura Skoda.A great tradition overseen by Adriana Casagrande,the daughter who looked after the jury and competitions with such care.A 16 year old Alexander Lonquich created quite a stir when he won first prize.Perlemuter was very amused to see Badura Skoda on stage tuning the rather out of tune piano himself!Carlo a student of Sergio Perticaroli ,the 1952 winner of the Busoni Competition, who died after a long illness that had left him paralysed.He had the misfortune to eventually die in mid August and Carlo and I were the only people there to salute a great artist who had given so much to so many aspiring young musicians.
The Purcell School comes to Cremona with their director Paul Hoskins ready to take part in the ‘ Beyond Erasmus’ round table discussions.Together with Menuhin and Chethams,the Purcell School is the most important institution for aspiring young musicians in the UK ,where musical training goes hand in hand with academic studies .William Fong ,head of keyboard studies ,had brought with him two ex students Kira Frolu and Thomas Kelly .It was a programme of three works all written at the beginning of the twentieth century.Kira Frolu,now studying at the RAM with Tessa Nicholson,played Mac Dowell’s Fireside Tales op 61 with ravishing sounds and the unmistakable ‘American’ sound of MacDowell .She brought a sense of character to the six short pieces that ranged from languid beauty to rhythmic good humour and even incorporated capricious jazz idioms ending with the long hymn like outpouring of ‘By Smouldering Embers’.A beautiful performance of ‘Estampes’ by William Fong who despite his onerous teaching commitments at the Purcell School and the Royal Academy manages to maintain playing of the highest order.Thomas Kelly ,now at the RCM with Dmitri Alexeev,is fast making a name for himself as the Ogdon of our day.He played the 16 Variations and Fugue by Rebecca Clarke that was written whilst she was a student of Charles Villiers Stanford and discovered in the archive only in 2003.
A charming and fascinating encore of six hands on one piano with Percy Granger’s ‘Zanzibar Boat Song’ in which William Fong also managed to turn the pages ,showing yet again his extraordinary versatility.
Another amazing edition of Cremona Musica with three days dedicated to all forms of music .Creating a link without barriers between people who have a passion for a means of communication where words are superfluous.Music is indeed the food of love and unity between man and in Cremona it is playing on with a gentle insistence that is being noted by a world hungry for quality and not just quantity.
The numbers of the 2023 edition of Cremona Musica International Exhibitions and Festival, which took place in the international capital of lutherie from September 22nd to 24th, witness the success of the Italian kermess: 360 exhibitors, over half of which from 35 foreign countries, 180 events in 3 days, over one thousand professionals involved in concerts, masterclasses andpresentations and 70 international buyers from 23 countries. Cremona Musica confirms itself as a unique and extraordinary experience for every music lover.
«The synergies with the local institutions have been crucial for the success of Cremona Musica» for the President of Cremonafiere Roberto Biloni; «we are already working on the 2024 edition, which will take place from the 27th to the 29th of September: we are deeply convinced that there are still wide margins of growth».
Among the hundreds of musicians who joined the kermess, some internationally renowned artists and enterprises received the prestigious Cremona Musica Awards: cellist Steven Isserlis were awarded for the Performance category, Reycled Orchestra of Cateura (Paraguay) for the Project, Jean-Jacques Eigeldinger for Communication, Amalia Ramirez for Guitar lutherie, and Fisarmoniche Paolo Soprani for Accordion Manufacturing.
Italian piano tuner and repairer Angelo Fabbrini received the special prize A Life for Piano during the Saturday night concert Io suono italiano, an event which paid homage to Italian culture from Dante to Stradivari: the premiere of the video project Istante Dante was intertwined with the performance of renowned artists, such as Indian musician and scholar Singh Bai Baldeep and Italian pianist Roberto Prosseda, artistic director of Cremona Musica.
Once again Cremona shows the pivotal role of Italian culture in connecting the international world of music professionals and lovers, thanks to a unique mix of high quality exhibitors and engagingevents: a three-days immersion in an exciting atmosphere that feeds the eyes, the ears and the soul of every participant.
A fairy Princess descends on Perivale to show us with such modesty how Grieg can really sound in the hands of a master.Eloquence,elegance a multifaceted sense of colour and above all a complete mastery of style that was recognised with the Gold Medal at the International Grieg Competition in Oslo .A breathtaking mastery with fingers that belonged to the keys like limpets searching out ravishing sounds that are hidden within and are only found by a very select few.They are great artists indeed and a very rare breed.It was Dr Mather who was approached by a Japanese member of the audience asking if his wife could give a concert at St Mary’s -‘She plays quite well’ he said and the family had recently transferred to Ealing sharing their time between Tokyo and Ealing.Looking at her CV Dr Mather was amazed to see the success that she had won in many International Piano competition.The result was today’s concert that in Dr Mather’s words was ‘sensational – a pianist of great class’ and in fact one of the finest recitals out of 2000 that St Mary’s has ever had.
Born in Japan, Mayumi Sakamoto graduated from Tokyo University of the Arts Mayumi has been studying at the Hochschule fur Musik und Theater Hannover in Germany on a scholarship from the Rohm Music Foundation since 2005 and gained the KA degree (“Diplom” degree in Music, Artistic Training in Music) in 2007 additionally graduating the Soloist-diploma course 2013, with the orchestra prize.
Mayumi won the 1st prize and the Prix d’Oslo at the International Edvard Grieg Piano Competition in Norway> She was the 2nd Prize winner at the Top of the World International Piano Competition in Norway as well as at the XII Andorra International Piano Competition accompanied by the Special Prize for French Pieces of Music and Special Scholarship in Andorra. Pinerolo International Piano Competition in Italy, the Scottish International Piano Competition and the 2003 Leeds International Pianoforte Competition, a semi-finalist at the 2002 International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, and a diploma recipient at the Van Cliburn International Piano CompetitionShe also received prizes at numerous piano competitions in Japan including the 1st Prize at the 52nd All Japan Student Music Concours at the age of 15.Mayumi has recorded a CD of the Mozart’s piano concertos with the WDR Rundfunkorchester Köln in 2012, and Grieg’s Piano Concerto with Göttingen Symphony Orchestra, Germany, 2013.
A sumptuous feast of exhilaration and seduction surrounded by beauty in Mary Orr’s salon at the Matthiesen Gallery in Mayfair
A trio of Mendelssohnian delight from a composer who after being summonsed to play to President Wilson after the enormous success of the premiere of his opera Goyescas which turned out to be Granados’s last performance before returning home on a ship that was torpedoed in the English Channel.
Piazzola on the other hand bringing the seduction of the night life and ravishing sleeze of Buenos Aires into the concert hall with the tangos of San Martin brought to life with passionate conviction by the Khong,Kaslin,Sandrin Trio.There was the unmistakable smoky atmosphere of Argentina missing slightly the slightly larger ensemble and of course the bandoneon but made up for with the choice of the more refined Tangos of insinuating melodic outpourings.Enyuan Khong adding some very expressive slides to her superb violin playing and Charlotte giving just that much more throbbing rubato.Cristian of course like the chameleon he is was able with the twitch of his shoulder and the switch of his foot to create just the sleeze that Mr Matthiessen had contributed to by turning down the house lights!
The Granados Trio an early work only discovered in 1976 and rarely programmed since.A great sweep and passion to the first movement in which the violin and cello play together with searing intensity of sumptuous sounds but of course the piano has the last word that in Cristians hands were of a purity and disarming simplicity.A ‘Scherzetto’ very much in the style of Mendelssohn with its lightweight rhythmic energy played with an evident ‘joie de vivre’.The musette Trio was full of buoyancy and life but interrupted by a solo piano recitativo before the return to the ‘Scherzetto’ with its impishly capricious ending.There was a veiled beauty to the ‘Duetto’ of a real ‘song without words’ and showed the superb ensemble of this newly formed trio.A finale truly ‘Dumka’ style followed with its infectious dance rhythms. I wonder if Granados would have published it had he not perished so ignominiously near to our shores. I imagine it was eventually found right at the bottom of his cupboard 80 years after it’s premiere in 1895 with the seventeen year old Pablo Casals.Forgotten about as he discovered his true genius for his native Spanish idioms wrapped up in transcendental pianistic trickery.
The Trio op. 50 in C major by Enrique Granados, one the most important Spanish works for piano was written in 1895.It was inspired and an attempt to reconcile the grand late-romantic Central European musical forms with a distinctly Spanish language based on the teachings of Felipe Pedrell. A work with a very complex musical structure in consonance with the late-romantic European tradition and an inspired content of a personal and poetical nature.
The Granados trio was premiered in Madrid with the composer himself at the piano, the violinist Julio Francés and a 17 year-old cellist Pablo Casals, at the time a student at the Madrid Conservatory. The work was never again performed during Granados’ life. After his tragic death it remained in complete oblivion until its publication in 1976 by Unión Musical Española.
A delay in New York, incurred by accepting a recital invitation from President Wilson caused him to miss his boat back to Spain. Instead, he took a ship to England, where he boarded the passenger ferry SS Sussex for Dieppe France. On the way across the English Channel , the Sussex was torpedoed by a German U boat , as part of the German World War I policy of unrestricted submarine warfare.According to witness Daniel Sargent, Granados’s wife, Amparo, was too heavy to get into a lifeboat. Granados refused to leave her and positioned her on a small life raft on which she knelt and he clung. Both then drowned within sight of other passengers.However, according to a different account from another survivor, “A survivor of the 1916 torpedo attack on a Cross channel ferry, Sussex, recognised Spanish composer Granados in a lifeboat, his wife in the water. Granados dived in to save her and perished.”The ship broke in two parts, and only one sank (along with 80 passengers). Ironically, the part of the vessel that contained his cabin did not sink and was towed to port, with most of the passengers, except for Granados and his wife, who were on the other side of the boat when it was hit. Granados and his wife left six children: Eduard (a musician), Solita, Enrique (a swimming champion), Víctor, Natalia, and Francisco.
The personal papers of Enrique Granados are preserved in, among other institutions, the National Library of Catalonia.
The Trio by Granados is an inspired and solid attempt to reconcile the grand late-romantic Central European musical forms with a distinctly Spanish language
— Juan Carlos Garvayo,
The Cuatro Estaciones Porteñas, also known as the Estaciones Porteñas or The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires, are a set of four tango compositions written by Astor Piazzola ,which were originally conceived and treated as different compositions rather than one suite, although Piazzolla performed them together from time to time. The pieces were scored for his quintet of violin (viola), piano, electric guitar, double bass and bandoneon.By giving the adjective portenoreferring to those born in Buenos Aires,the Argentine capital city, Piazzolla gives an impression of the four seasons in Buenos Aires. The order of performance Piazzolla gave to his “Estaciones Porteñas” is: Otoño (Autumn), Invierno (Winter), Primavera (Spring), Verano (Summer). It was different from Vivaldi’s order.
The Seasons
Verano Porteño (Buenos Aires Summer) written in 1965,originally as incidental music for the play ‘Melenita de oro’by Alberto Rodríguez Muñoz.
Invierno Porteño (Buenos Aires Winter) written in 1969.
Primavera Porteña (Buenos Aires Spring) premiered in 1969,contains counterpoint.
Otoño Porteño (Buenos Aires Autumn) premiered 1969. Astor Pantaleón Piazzolla (March 11, 1921 – July 4, 1992) was an argentine tango composer, bandoneon player, and arranger. His works revolutionized the traditional tango into a new style termed nuevo tango , incorporating elements from jazz and classical music A virtuoso bandoneonist, he regularly performed his own compositions with a variety of ensembles. Described as “the world’s foremost composer of Tango music”.At Ginastera’s urging, on August 16, 1953, Piazzolla entered his classical composition “Buenos Aires Symphony in Three Movements” for the Fabian Sevitzky Award. The performance took place at the law school in Buenos Aires with the symphony orchestra of Radio del Estado under the direction of Sevitzky himself. At the end of the concert, a fight broke out among members of the audience who were offended by the inclusion of two bandoneons in a traditional symphony orchestra. In spite of this Piazzolla’s composition won him a grant from the French government to study in Paris with the legendary French composition teacher Nadia Boulanger at the Fontainebleau conservatory. Piazzolla was tired of tango and tried to hide his tango and bandoneon compositions from Boulanger, thinking that his destiny lay in classical music. Introducing his work, Piazzolla played her a number of his classically inspired compositions, but it was not until he played his tango Triunfal that she congratulated him and encouraged him to pursue his career in tango, recognising that this was where his talent lay. This was to prove a historic encounter and a crossroads in Piazzolla’s career.With Boulanger he studied classical composition, including counterpoint which was to play an important role in his later tango compositions.
A triumph at Hatchlands but it was Chopin’s Erard that stole Andrzej heart before his concert on George IVs remarkable 1823 Streicher Viennese piano.A piano beautifully restored and it was Alec Cobbe who explained to Andrzej how to drive it .Six pedals needs some working out.Fazioli now has four pedals and if playing with an I pad you can add another two which equals six.But this piano was built two hundred years ago when there were certainly no I pads and pedals had a completely different meaning and usage.
With just an hour to get used to driving the left and the right pedals Andrzej though had fallen in love with the veiled beauty of sound of the Erard that Chopin had used in Scotland on his final tour just a year before his death.Andrzej spent most of his precious rehearsal time entranced by the sound of this instrument .However it was quite remarkable how on the Streicher piano he was able to immediately adapt the sound via the pedals during the concert that gave clarity and delicacy in the Bach and Mozart and depth of sound in the Chopin.A musician who listens to himself and can instantly search for and find sounds that can bring the music alive with intelligence,scholarship and passion is a musician to be reckoned with.
The Bach Prelude and Fugue in D Book 1 immediately showed us the refined tone palette he could find with delicacy and a rhythmic dance from the bass that I remember very well from Rosalyn Tureck’s much more robust performance on the modern Steinway.An infectious lilt to the music almost like riding a horse but on this instrument there were some very subtle shadings and colours .The Fugue,too,unusually staccato but the short note never accented which gave a beautiful rhythmic propulsion to the fugue that was shaped with the same care as a tone poem and not just allowed to bounce along on its own as we are all too often used to hearing.A Prelude and Fugue shaped into a wondrous overture with the great artistry that was to be the hallmark of the entire concert.
The Chopin Fourth Ballade which had sounded ravishingly veiled on the Erard was here much brighter but Andrzej allowed the music to breathe so naturally with the variations gaining each time in nobility with masterly control.The return of the introduction with the inner tenor register slightly highlighted gave such depth to the sound as it spun into the heights with an etherial cadenza before the contrapuntal return of the theme that was played with ever more crystalline clarity.The final variations were played with passionate commitment but also a remarkable control of texture that made the final glorious full sonority so overwhelming.The five adjoining chords leading to the coda were played with disarming simplicity without any fuss just five simple chords to diffuse the sumptuous climax before a busy coda of transcendental difficulty.But even here the remarkable time and shape he brought to this afterthought revealed the genius of Chopin that this was not just empty virtuosity but textures of passionate poignancy as the temperature rose to boiling point before cascading to the final noble chords of one of the greatest most poetic creations of the Romantic piano repertoire.
Back to Mozart and a shift to the left with the pedals to find that beautiful clarity of Bach once more.A clarity with a delicacy of sound that suited the intimacy of Mozart’s Rondo in Aminor.Andrzej later was to experiment on J C Bach’s piano on which Mozart himself had played his A minor Sonata ; but in the concert on the Streicher piano he had found the ideal colour that revealed the disarming simplicity and poignant beauty of this jewel in Mozart’s crown.
He chose Chopin to finish this short lunchtime concert and it was the early youthful Polonaise published after his death that was able to demonstrate the restrained grandeur with the delicate jeux perlé virtuosity that Chopin would have astonished the salons of his youth with.Exquisite charm of the central musette contrasted with the return of the refined showmanship of the Polonaise.Andrzej was to play another Polonaise by a contemporary,Kurpinski,as an encore which demonstrated the same charm and style of the period
Karol Kazimierz Kurpiński (March 6, 1785 – September 18, 1857) was a Polish composer,conductor and pedagogue .A romanticist and one of the most revered composers before Chopin who he met in 1828. He helped to lay the foundations of a national style and prepared the ground for Polish music of the Romantic period particularly Chopin. He contributed to the development of Polish opera, introducing new musical devices and achieving a novel mode of expression
This was to be no ordinary concert but a voyage in time to find the very source of the creative process which in no way limits fantasy,passion or commitment but puts it into the context of the age in which it was born.What a surprise Alec Cobbe had,to discover a Polonaise by Beethoven that Andrzej played on Haydn’s own piano.A piano that Beethoven too would have known in the period of the first three Sonatas op 2 that Beethoven was to dedicate to his teacher.
Surrounded by so many beautiful instruments all wonderfully restored and to be able to play the same instruments that composers had used to create eternal masterpieces is a lesson indeed.But all these instruments are in rooms that are a size that allows them to be fully appreciated and not, as so often happens,antique instruments being brought into halls that can accomodate many more than these poor instruments can comunicate with in the same manner.To quote myself :’…….an example to us all of how Mozart could be played respecting the period but not being intimidated by it…….. becoming one,as the very operatic meaning of Mozart was transmitted through them to us thirsty for such enticing musical integrity and inspiration and dare I add ‘authenticity!’(https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2023/08/25/impeccable-living-mozart-as-queen-bodicea-drives-her-flaming-chariot-to-meet-grieg-salasswigutpastuszka-and-the-ohorkiestra-take-warsaw-by-storm/).
The final work in this all too short recital was the Sonata in B minor op 58 by Chopin.A performance in which architecture and artistry combined with poetry and passion bringing to life a masterpiece written towards the end of Chopin’s short life.A subdued opening of the Allegro Maestoso as Alec Cobbe had advised.The more restrained you play the greater the effect on this instrument.There was a subtle aristocratic shape to the second subject ‘sostenuto’ as Chopin writes but not a change of tempo and it was this overall architectural shape that gave such nobility to a work that in lesser hands can sound so fragmented.The left hand in the development was like a recitativo leading to the triumphant return of the opening this time in all its blazing glory.A Scherzo of clarity,like quick silver, as it weaved a wondrous shape with such luminosity of sound.A Trio that was with a gloriously replenished full sound of unusual brooding nobility but also wistful and beseeching as it searched for its way back to the Scherzo that in the end just seemed to evolve out of thin air.Straight into the mighty opening chords of the Largo before the purity of the melodic line on a pulsating accompaniment like a constant and reflective heart beat.The long and expansive meanderings that follow were of poignant beauty and the sudden unexpected appearance of the tenor and bass voices were revealed as if by magic.The opening melodic line returning with an even mellower sound leading us to the poignant beauty of the final duet between the two beautiful worlds with which Chopin had so entranced us.The Finale grew out of the final chord of the Largo building up to the agitato Rondo with very carefully controlled and phrased octaves spread over the entire keyboard.A masterly control of sound and tempo left Andrzej time to even add an ornament to the second appearance of the rondo theme as it gradually built to a climax of extraordinary technical mastery.A building of tension and excitement that that finally burst into flames with the treacherous final page played with the security and total abandon of a young virtuoso on the crest of a wave.
Amazing seance at Steinways today where Rose McLachlan had comissioned 22 female composers to write a nocturne inspired by Chopin. So not like Rosemary Brown but a much more eclectic choice. To give a voice to some of the woman composers of the day of which far too little is known. Rosemary Brown would receive music from the hereafter and Peter Katin would perform it at the Wigmore Hall. The difference is that these are living composers writing music inspired by Chopin and performed by a young pianist whose father had infact been a student of Peter Katin. But Rose is indeed a Rose and making her way in the music profession with performances that are already being noted by the critics for their authority and musical integrity. Inspired by a project that she had to present for her master’s degree she decided on this project of creativity to give a voice to a category that has lain silent for too long. https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2022/08/24/rose-mclachlan-at-st-james-piccadilly-je-sensje-joue-je-trasmet-artistry-and-poetic-imagination-of-a-musician/
Some beautiful playing for composers inspired by the world of Chopin. With the amazing McLachlan family at the helm we heard fourteen of these nocturnes by composers that were also present.
With Father Murray presenting ,brother Matthew page turning ,Mother Katherine coordinating and last but not least Rose dedicating her extraordinary artistry to presenting each of these composers with total commitment and artistry . Some very distinguished guests and the entire concert with interviews all streamed live giving a platform to some dedicated women composers of whom we speak all too rarely.
Piano Sonata No. 1 in C Op. 1 (1852-3) I. Allegro II. Andante (nach einem altdeutschen Minneliede) III. Allegro molto e con fuoco – Più mosso IV. Allegro con fuoco – Presto non troppo ed agitato
Piano Sonata No. 2 in F sharp minor Op. 2 (1852) I. Allegro non troppo, ma energico II. Andante con espressione III. Scherzo. Allegro – Trio. Poco più moderato IV. Finale. Sostenuto – Allegro non troppo e rubato
Interval
Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor Op. 5 (1853) I. Allegro maestoso II. Andante espressivo III. Scherzo. Allegro energico IV. Intermezzo. Andante molto V. Finale. Allegro m moderato ma rubato
Elisabeth Leonskaja the Queen of the Keyboard .Music pure music just erupted from the depths of her soul and struck us with unusual force . Not since Tatyana Nikolaeva or Annie Fischer have we experienced a direct communication between the composer, the music and the audience. Rushing on and off as she was a lady on a mission with total self effacing authority.Gradiosity,Majesty,Etherial ,Orchestral,Nobility and above all seductive …….breathtaking in its architectural shape with the construction of three great monuments before our astonished eyes. We are not used to such overwhelming authority and music pure music. It puts us all to shame as we listen enraptured seduced and totally overwhelmed ……Why are there no others like this left from the days of Wilhelm Kempff ,Edwin Fischer ,Rudolf Serkin?A musician where the medium becomes almost irrelevant and is the means through which music can live and breathe as it did when the ink was still wet on the page.Alexei Lubimov was a revelation recently too ,in Warsaw, but with out this Leonine temperament that I also remember from Wilhelm Kempff when he played op 5 in London in the 70’s before his Indian Summer of sublime introspection.
There was a beauty and flexibility of her arms and wrists as she seemed to be swimming in a tide of sounds with a naturalness that was extraordinarily beautiful to see.There was an etherial beauty to the question and beseeching answer in the Andante of op 1 followed by the grandeur of the Scherzo and the contrasting fluidity of the Trio.An opening of great orchestral sounds played from on high with a dynamic drive that was like a Lioness being let loose to devour the keys.There was colour and mystery added to the declamatory outpourings of the Allegro non troppo,ma energico op 2 .Absolute desolation of the Scherzo again contrasting with the fluidity of the Trio.The veiled luminosity of the chorale in the Finale of op 5 I have never heard so whispered as she drew us in to listen as the music became ever more noble and passionate.Her control of sonority and sense of balance allied to a passionate wild abandon was surely the sum of a great master. A vision of space and timeless wonder. Curzon and Rubinstein are the only memories I have of the coda of the Andante espressivo of op 5 with sounds that I never expected to hear again until today. The final arpeggios thrown into the air to capture that luminosity but then catching the sound as it reverberated within the piano and nourished our souls . A Scherzo that shot from these ethereal chords like someone igniting a rocket. The aristocratic grandeur she brought to the last pages will resound in the walls of this hallowed hall for long to come . But seated at the piano and visibly exhausted she allowed Chopin’s Nocturne in E flat to flow from her fingers like water flowing over some celestial stream .To watch her fingers on high play every note like bells being caressed and to hear such whispered secrets made one wonder was it just a dream that we had just experienced the greatest performances of Brahms this hall has ever known!
In the autumn of 1853 having met some of the biggest names in music, the young man travelled to Düsseldorf and rang the Schumanns’ doorbell. The visit was life-changing. Robert and Clara Schumann could not have been warmer or more extravagant in their praise.
Schumann’s famous description of the young Brahms appeared in the Leipzig Neue Zeitschrift für Musik of 28 October 1853, in an article headed ‘Neue Bahnen’ (‘New paths’). Less than a month earlier, Brahms had called at the house of Robert and Clara Schumann in Düsseldorf. (‘He played us sonatas, scherzos etc. by him, all of them full of effusive imagination, intimate feeling and masterly form’, wrote Clara in her diary.)
Seated at the piano, he began to reveal wondrous regions to us. We were drawn into ever more magical spheres. In addition, the playing was absolutely inspired, transforming the piano into an orchestra of lamenting and loudly jubilant voices. There were sonatas, more like veiled symphonies; songs, whose poetry would be understood without knowing the words, although a profound vocal melody runs through them all; individual piano pieces, some of them demonic in nature while graceful in form; then sonatas for violin and piano, string quartets—and each work so different from the next that it seemed to stream forth from its own individual source. And then it seemed as though he were uniting them all like a stream roaring forth into a waterfall, with a peaceful rainbow above its tumultuously descending waves, and butterflies flitting about on the banks accompanied by the song of nightingales.
Two of the ‘veiled symphonies’ (Robert Schumann’s words) that Brahms played to the Schumanns were the first two works in tonight’s programme. The Piano Sonata No. 1 in C (dedicated to Joachim) was completed after the Piano Sonata No. 2, but was published first.
The Piano Sonata No. 1 in C major, Op. 1, was written in Hamburg in 1853, and published later that year. Despite being his first published work, he had actually composed his Piano Sonata n. 2 first, but chose this work to be his first published opus because he felt that it was of higher quality. The piece was sent with his second sonata to Breitkopf &. Härtel with a letter of recommendation from Schumann who had already praised Brahms enthusiastically, and the sonata shows signs of an effort to impress in its symphonic grandeur, technical demands, and dramatic character. It was dedicated to Joseph Joachim
The sonata is in four movements:
Allegro
Andante (nach einem altdeutschen Minneliede),
Allegro molto e con fuoco — Più mosso
Allegro con fuoco — Presto non troppo ed agitato
Text of song
Verstohlen geht der Mond auf. Blau, blau Blümelein! Durch Silberwölkchen führt sein Lauf. Blau, blau Blümelein! Rosen im Tal, Mädel im Saal, O schönste Rosa!Stealthily rises the moon. Blue, blue flower! Through silver cloudlets makes its way. Blue, blue flower! Roses in the dale, Maiden in the hall, O handsomest Rosa!
The first movement is in conventional sonata form with a repeated exposition. The opening of the first theme resembles the opening of Beethoven’s “Hammerklavier Sonata . The second movement is a theme and variations inspired by the song Verstohlen geht der Mond auf. Brahms was to rewrite it for female chorus in 1859 (WoO 38/20). The third movement is a scherzo and trio. The fourth is a loose rondowhose theme is noticeably changed at every recurrence. It is highly technically demanding on the performer, with toccata-like intensity and rapid thirds throughout. The form of the rondo is a palindrome ABACACABA.
The Piano Sonata No. 2 in F♯ minor, Op. 2 of was written in Hamburg but in 1852, and published the year after.
It was dedicated to Clara Schumann
The sonata is in four movements:
Allegro non troppo, ma energico
Andante con espressione
Scherzo: Allegro — Poco più moderato
Finale: Sostenuto — Allegro non troppo e rubato — Molto sostenuto
The first movement is in the conventional sonata -allegro form. The second movement is a theme and variations based on the German Minnesang “Mir ist leide“. Like the theme and variations of the first Sonata ,the variations move from the minor mode to the parallel major. The third movement is a scherzo and trio whose beginning theme is almost identical to that of the second movement. The finale begins with a brief introduction in A the relative major of F sharp minor. The main subject of the introduction serves as the first theme of this movement, which is in sonata form and contains a repeated exposition. The codaof the finale, marked pianissimo and to be played with the soft pedal, returns to and expands upon material from the movement’s introduction.
The Piano Sonata No. 3 in F minor, Op. 5 of was written in 1853 and published the following year. The sonata is unusually large, consisting of five movements as opposed to the traditional three or four. When he wrote this piano sonata, the genre was seen by many to be past its heyday. Brahms, enamored of Beethoven and the classical style, composed Piano Sonata No. 3 with a masterful combination of free Romantic spirit and strict classical architecture. As a further testament to Brahms’ affinity for Beethoven, the Piano Sonata is infused with the instantly recognizable motive from Beethoven’s Symphony n. 5 during the first, third, and fourth movements.Composed in Dusseldorf , it marks the end of his cycle of three sonatas and was presented to Schumann in November of that year; it was the last work that Brahms submitted to Schumann for commentary. Brahms was barely 20 years old at its composition. The piece is dedicated to Countess Ida von Hohenthal of Leipzig.
Brahms worked on his Sonata No. 3 in F minor while staying with the Schumanns as a guest. Its most obvious feature is the addition of an Intermezzo between the Scherzo and the Finale. This casts a look back to the passionate Andante second movement, at the top of which Brahms briefly quoted a poem by CO Sternau about lovers in the moonlight. The closing bars, where the measure changes from three to four beats in a bar, magically discharge some of the most erotic music Brahms wrote.
The sonata is in five movements:
Allegro maestoso
Andante Andante espressivo — Andante molto
Scherzo . Allegro energico avec trio (F minor – D♭ major – F minor)
Intermezzo (Rückblick / Regard en arrière) Andante molto
Finale. Allegro moderato ma rubato (F minor, ending in F major)
The second movement begins with a quotation above the music of a poem by Otto Inkermann under the pseudonym C.O. Sternau.Perhaps symbolizing the two beating hearts in this Andante are its two principal themes which alternate throughout the movement.
Der Abend dämmert, das Mondlicht scheint, da sind zwei Herzen in Liebe vereint und halten sich selig umfangen Through evening’s shade, the pale moon gleams While rapt in love’s ecstatic dreams Two hearts are fondly beating.
At the centre of Mihai Ritivoiu’s recital is the timeless music of that greatest of composers, J.S. Bach and the influence he had on many composers through the ages. Father of the fugue, Beethoven was to emulate this musical device in his Op.110 sonata, and Busoni was inspired to make his own transcriptions of many of Bach’s works. Similarly Mihai himself brings us right up to date with his own variations on one of Bach’s Chorales as well as performing a new work by Stephane Delplace, which he recently premiered.
The concert with an almost obligatory title these days where packages are easier to sell Mihai had decided on : “Inspirational Bach.” Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750) is unquestionably the most revered figure in the entire history of western classical music, “The Father of Music” , and often being referred to by other composers, like Frédéric Chopin ,Ludwig Van Beethoven and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, as a key inspiration.
Simple grand Beethoven at St Martins. I was thinking how proud Joan Havill would be to hear Mihai Ritivoiu blessed by the Gods today as he took us into realms of beauty and mystery that dreams are made of with Beethoven’s penultimate Sonata op110. A Brahms op 116 n 4 floundering ,perchance to dream on a magic wave of sounds posing questions of unanswerable poignancy. An artist of quite extraordinary powers of communication. A musician who thinks more of the music than himself is an artist to cherish indeed these days.
Beginning his recital with one of the most sublime of Busoni’s transcriptions of Bach’s Chorale Preludes BWV 639 ‘ Ich ruf zu dir,Herr Jesu Christ’ and creating an atmosphere of beauty and serenity that was to pervade the whole recital.There was a purity and clarity of sound with a sense of balance that allowed the melodic line to float on a sumptuous cloud of golden sounds created deep in the bass with delicacy and richness of sonority.The final phrases were of a whispered beauty of the revelation of a true believer.With the radiance of the sun shining through the great glass window behind the altar it was indeed a poignant start to a recital of beauty,simplicity and contemplation .’Light is suspended in a veil by the etching of the clear glass with a swirl of flecks; and at dusk, as daylight fades, the central oval glows, mysteriously self-lit.’The painting of The Veil of St Veronicaby Zurbarán is cited by Shirazeh Houshiary as a source for her East Window which was installed in 2008 .Zurbarán’s image of a piece of cloth bearing a likeness of the face of Christ connects with Houshiary’s idea of the veil that underlies her design of the steel grid of the window. Here, abstraction and representation merge into an iconic whole that invites contemplation.’
Mihai followed Bach with a fascinating work by Stephane Delplace.There was a recurring leit motif reminiscent of bells chiming out of which emerged Bach like contrapuntal passages of nostalgia and beauty.There was also a mellifluous outpouring of continuous motion of purity and simplicity that was a wash of pastoral innocence.
Stéphane Delplace was born 11th November 1953 (age 69) in Bordeaux France ,and is a composer ,teacher and pianist .He studied piano under Pierre Sancan , as well as Harmony (Alain Bernaud), Counterpoint (Jean-Paul Holstein), Fugue (Michel Merlet ), and Orchestration (Serge Nigg) at the Conservatoire de paris from 1979 to 1984.Delplace began to compose in the mid-1980s, with a firm conviction, though unpopular at the time, that tonal music still hides infinite unexplored territories.Never parting from this ideal, his music finds its roots in that of Bach,Brahms,Faure,Ravel,Prokofiev ….
Bach’s mighty Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue followed with a performance of great authority where Mihai’s vision of line was of a flexibility that made the weaving stream of notes a living and searching sound with recitativi of poignant beauty of searing significance .The beautifully embellished final phrases leading the way to whispered secrets as the fugue subject emerged from the final chord much as Beethoven was to do in his op 110 Sonata that we were to appreciate later in the programme.There was a rhythmic buoyancy to the fugue as it gradually built in fervour with layer upon layer added until the final glorious explosion of arrival at it’s goal with the final note placed with such an aristocratic sense of timing deep in the bass.
Not to be outdone Mihai had written his own variations on the chorale from Bach’s St John Passion:’Herzliebster Jesu,was hast du verbrochen’ (‘Ah, holy Jesus, how hast thou offended?’).Its text is a Passion hymn by J Heermann, famously found in both the St John and St Matthew Passions. A melancholy affect is created by the slow-moving counterpoint, spiced with suspensions and chromatic lines and the final notes of the melody are filled in chromatically, highlighting the poignancy that is at the heart of both the theology and the music of the prelude.The tune has been used many times, including settings by J.S. Bach : one of the Neumeister Chorales for organ, BWV 1093,two movements of the St John Passion, and three of the St Matthew Passion .Brahms used it too for one of his Eleven Chorale Preludes for organ, Op. 122: No. 2.Max Reger’s Passion, No. 4 from his organ pieces op 145 (1915–1916), uses this melody. Mauricio Kagel quoted the hymn, paraphrased as “Herzliebster Johann, was hast du verbrochen”, in his oratorio Sankt- Bach-Passion telling Bach’s life, composed for the tricentenary of Bach’s birth in 1985. Mihai’s variations were very impressive and I was trying to guess the various composers that maybe had inspired each variation. The 2nd was Rachmaninov,3rd Debussy water nymph,4th chiselled beauty of notes being shadowed alla Poulenc or Schumann,5th was certainly De Falla,6th Ravel,7th Debussy -Rachmaninov ,8th was the return of the original chorale this time with comments and the 9th Russian maybe Prokofiev.A fascinating work that just showed what a real thinking musician Mihai is and am sure that my comments on an innocent first hearing will bring a smile to his face but it showed what a rich palette of invention he could bring to his own composition.
His performance of op 110 by Beethoven was simply one of the most beautiful and convincing that I can remember hearing.As he said Beethoven’s use of the extremes of the keyboard could be considered the search for the infinite in what was to be his penultimate sonata.Op 111 the last of the 32 Sonatas finishes with a glimpse of paradise as the trills take on an etherial significance much as they were to do for Scriabin a century later.The amazing thing was that Beethoven was totally deaf but the sounds that only he could hear in his head he was able to write down with such meticulous care able to share this great testament with eternity.The only sonata without a dedication as it was thought it might be a secret memorial for his ‘Immortal Beloved’.Published without a dedication, there is evidence that Beethoven intended to dedicate Opp. 110 and 111 to Antonie Brentano (Op.111 was eventually dedicated to the Archduke Rudolf) and 110 very significantly left without.Mihai’s was a performance of purity and pastoral innocence with a wondrous musicianship that can say so much with so little effort or personal intervention.There was a great contrast with the Scherzo of almost wild abandon and masterly control in the treacherous Trio where his remarkable restraint made the return of the Scherzo even more of a contrast.Ravishing beauty of the Adagio and a subtle use of the pedal and the bebung effect of allowing a single note to vibrate – not easy on the modern day instruments.It lead to an aria of subtle poetic significance almost as though Beethoven was at last at peace with himself and the world.The great bass entries in the Fugue were every bit as breathtaking as the bass pedal stops of a church organ.The return of the fugue subject in inversion floated in on the vibrations left from the huge sonorities of repeated insistent chords.It was so noticeable too the way that Mihai caressed the keys never hitting but stroking with horizontal movements never vertical.The whole effect both visual and in sound was of luminosity and sublime beauty as Beethoven built the final pages to a colossal climax of passion and the fervent conviction of someone who could see the light that awaited him just six years on.
Programme
Bach/Busoni – Chorale Prelude BWV 639, “Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ” Stephane Delplace – Sisyphe Bach – Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue in D minor, BWV 903 M. Ritivoiu – Variations on a Bach Chorale – “Herzliebster Jesu, was hast du verbrochen” Beethoven – Piano Sonata in A flat major op 110
Mihai Ritivoiu Piano
Born in Bucharest, Mihai Ritivoiu is a laureate of numerous national and international competitions, most notably the George Enescu International Competition.
Mihai leads an international career performing solo and chamber music recitals in Europe and Asia, and has played concertos with the George Enescu Philharmonic Orchestra, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, the English Chamber Orchestra and the MDR Leipzig Radio Orchestra. He collaborated with conductors such as Joshua Weilerstein, Robert Trevino, Michael Collins, Cristian Mandeal, Christian Badea and Horia Andreescu. He has been invited to play at prestigious festivals, including Young Euro Classic in Berlin, George Enescu Festival in Bucharest, St Magnus International Festival, and appeared on stages such as Cadogan Hall, Barbican Centre, Konzerthaus Berlin, Studio Ernest Ansermet Geneva and the Romanian Athenaeum and Radio Hall in Bucharest.
Regularly invited to play on BBC Radio 3’s programme ‘In Tune’, his performances have been broadcast on Radio Romania Muzical, Radio Television Suisse and Medici TV. His debut album “Transcendence” with solo works by Franck, Enescu and Liszt has been praised as “beautifully recorded, handsomely played – a solo recital to cherish” (The Arts Desk).
A graduate with the highest honours from the National University of Music in Bucharest and the Guildhall School of Music & Drama in London, Mihai studied with Professors Viniciu Moroianu and Joan Havill. He has taken part in masterclasses and lessons with Dmitri Bashkirov, Dominique Merlet, Emmanuel Ax, Richard Goode, Jean-Claude Pennetier and has been mentored by Valentin Gheorghiu and Christopher Elton. Most recently, he has pursued directing from the keyboard with Ricardo Castro at the Scuola di Musica di Fiesole.
In addition to his solo recitals and concerto appearances, Mihai has a rich chamber music activity. His partners have included Corina Belcea, Antoine Lederlin, Roland Pidoux, Oleg Kogan and Alexander Sitkovetsky. He forms a duo with the cellist Yoanna Prodanova, with whom he has performed in the United Kingdom, France and The Netherlands. Their first album as a duo, with works for piano and cello by Chopin, Fauré and Janacek was recently released on the Linn Records label.
Mihai is a City Music Foundation artist and a Freeman of the Worshipful Company of Musicians. He has received generous support from the Liliana and Peter Ilica Foundation for the Endowment of the Arts, Erbiceanu Cultural Foundation and Ratiu Family Charitable Foundation.