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Maurice
Ravel
Concerto
for Piano, Left Hand,
and Orchestra
The Bulgarian National Symphony
Boris Spassov, conductor 20:34
Alexander Scriabin
Nocturne op. 9, No. 2 5:40
Camille Saint-Saens
Six Études Op. 134, No 1 19:13
Johann Sebastian Bach/
Johannes Brahms
Chaconne (Study No 5) 13:47
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Classical Net
www.classical.net
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RAVEL Piano Concerto for the Left Hand in D. SCRIABIN
Nocturne, Op. 9, No. 2. SAINT-SAENS Six Etudes, Op. 135, No.
1. BACH/BRAHMS Chaconne (Study No. 5)
Joâo Carlos Martins, piano; Boris Spassov,
conductor; Bulgarian National Symphony
- Labor LAB 7033-2 [DDD] (58:42)
As the saying goes, when life gives you lemons, make lemonade.
Brazilian pianist Joâo Carlos Martins has been plagued by injuries,
accidents, and illnesses; still he keeps on playing. Most recently, he
lost the use of his right hand, but instead of throwing in the towel,
Martins has taken on the piano repertoire for the left hand only. This
is the first volume of Joao Carlos Martins for the left hand.
Ravels concerto probably is the most famous work written
for one hand only. It, like so many left-hand works, was written for pianist
Paul Wittgenstein, who had lost his right arm during World War One. Much
of the time, its hard to believe that just one hand is playing.
Martins and the Bulgarian orchestra are by no means idiomatic in this
concerto - Martins alternately seems to be picking and thrashing his way
through thickets of notes, and the orchestra plays with a savagery quite
unexpected for Ravel. Nevertheless, youll never hear another performance
of this concerto quite like the present one, so if this music is dearto
your heart, dont miss this brave and daringly uncivilized performance
of it.
At one time, Martins downplayed his ability to play sustained,
legato music effectively. Well, to merge two old phrases, necessity makes
strange bedfellows. At one time, the Scriabin Nocturne would have been
odd repertoire for the pianist. Martins plays it songfully but emphatically
- again, not in a manner that I would call idiomatic, yet theres
a compellingly defiant quality to this pianism. The six Saint-Saens etudes
are not remarkable music; even so, they are effective occasional pieces.
Some of them are neo-Classical, even neo-Baroque in style, and the dryness
of these pieces in particular suits Martins well.
It was inevitable that Martins - one of this eras greatest
Bach players - would now record Johannes Brahmss transcription of
the famous Bach Chaconne. (Brahms told Clara Schumann he could enjoy performing
this work only by playing it with the left hand - doing so helped him
to understand the technical difficulties faced by the solo violinist in
Bachs original.) This is a fitting end to the CD, and also a moving
one. All the virtues of Martinss Bach pianism - crispness, clarity,
and communication - are evident here.
These recordings were made in June 2001 in Sofia. The piano
sound is detailed, but more attractive in the Ravel than in the solo recordings.
Labor promises that Martinss new recording of works by Haydn and
Mozart will be released this year.
Raymond Tuttle
press release
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