Anton Stepanovich Arensky and Sergei Eduardovich Bortkiewicz are hardly
household names. Arensky’s delicious Piano Trio in D minor continues to
keep its place on the fringes of the chamber repertoire, and the Waltz
movement from his Suite for two pianos receives an occasional outing;
otherwise nothing. Who has even heard of Bortkiewicz other than
aficionados of the piano’s dustier repertoire?
Arensky was born
in 1861 in Novgorod, a birthplace shared with Balakirev whose influence
on the course of his country’s music during the second part of the
nineteenth century was more profound than any other. Arensky, born a
generation later and without the same musical genius and aggressive
nationalism, fell under the spell of the post-Chopin/Liszt school (both
composers revered by Balakirev and his nationalist ‘Free School’ of
music). He was not going to extend the piano’s expressive potential as
the mightier talents of Scriabin, Medtner and Rachmaninov were later to
do.
Arensky’s gifts were, nevertheless, precocious. By the age of
nine he had already composed some songs and piano pieces. His father (a
doctor and accomplished amateur cellist) and mother (her son’s first
teacher and an excellent pianist herself) moved to St Petersburg and the
boy entered the Conservatory there in 1879, graduating in 1882, a year
after writing the present Piano Concerto.
Arensky’s Opus 2 is
unmistakably indebted to Chopin and Tchaikovsky, with the melodic grace
of Mendelssohn and some of the more virtuosic passages of Liszt thrown
in for good measure. (The last movement threatens to break into the
opening of Grieg’s Piano Concerto!) Indeed, after hearing the work for
the very first time, the listener somehow feels that he knows it
intimately, like an old friend … undemanding, and for whom one has to
make no special effort.
It’s a cosy piece, full of hummable
tunes. As one would expect of a composition pupil of Rimsky-Korsakov, it
is expertly crafted and the piano part is distinctive and beautifully
laid out. The most daring departure from convention is in the use of a
5/4 time signature in the Finale. It was a quirk of Arensky’s that he
enjoyed unusual metres. (Tchaikovsky even reproached him for doing so.)
The
Concerto captured the imagination of many pianists of the day—it was a
favourite of the youthful Vladimir Horowitz—and it provided an effective
and stylish vehicle for many a barn-stormer before its salon prettiness
came to be seen as superficial and second-rate. Arensky dedicated the
work to the great cellist ‘Herrn Professor Carl Davidoff’ [sic], head of
the St Petersburg Conservatory during the time the composer studied
there. It was a dedication repeated when he composed his celebrated Trio
in Davidov’s memory.
The Concerto was published in 1883 and was
an immediate success in both St Petersburg and Moscow. The composer,
having won the Gold Medal for composition with his Symphony No 1 in B
minor, was appointed Professor of Harmony and Counterpoint at the Moscow
Conservatory. A successful if not adventurous career would seem to have
been presaged by these youthful triumphs. Not only this, but he was
befriended and championed by Tchaikovsky. A product of the Nationalist
school of St Petersburg and now a star on the staff of the more
international Moscow establishment, Arensky continued to compose
prolifically as well as teach (Rachmaninov, Scriabin and Gretchaninov
were among his pupils) until 1894. He resigned his post on being offered
the directorship of the Imperial Court Chapel in succession to
Balakirev himself, no less, who recommended Arensky for the position.
This involved a move back to St Petersburg and it is significant that
the other composition of Arensky’s presented here dates from 1899 and
is, again, a product of his life in the city headquarters of the Russian
nationalist school: Russian themes in a cosmopolitan wrapping.
The
Fantasy on Russian folksongs, Opus 48, is a brief but attractive
rhapsody using two folk tunes collected by the ethno-musicological
pioneer Trophim Ryabinin. The first (Andante sostenuto) is in E minor;
the second (Allegretto) in D minor. Slight though the piece may be, it
makes for a pleasant listen on disc, for in what concert hall does one
now hear this kind of piano-and-orchestra lollipop?
The
directorship of the Imperial Chapel provided not only a handsome salary
but also a lifetime pension of 6,000 roubles a year for Arensky.
Underneath this apparently ordinary story of modest acclaim and success,
however, there ran a dark and troubled (though typically Russian)
streak. Arensky, from very early in his career, was an alcoholic and an
inveterate gambler. Moreover, his private life remains a mystery. He
never married and elected to receive few visitors—an austere and
unexpected contrast to the genial, expressive lyricism of his attractive
music. He died of consumption in a sanatorium in Finland in February
1906.
The Bortkiewicz Concerto has been recorded once before,
albeit in a heavily cut version. This Hyperion issue is therefore a
premiere recording of the complete work. The American pianist Marjorie
Mitchell made several out-of-the-way concerto discs with the conductor
William Strickland in the late 1950s and early ’60s, those by Carpenter,
Field, Delius and Britten among them. Her recording of the Bortkiewicz
Concerto was coupled with Busoni’s Indian Fantasy! That Brunswick disc
has acquired something of a legendary status among collectors (it is
extremely hard to come by) because Bortkiewicz’s Piano Concerto No 1 is
one of the great ‘fun’ concertos with its heady bravura writing, lush
orchestration, strong, well-wrought and effective material and, in the
first movement, one of the most seductive, romantic themes of the whole
genre. Hollywood never had it this good—close your eyes and
black-and-white films of lost love, heartache and yearning passion are
conjured up. If the other two movements are less successful they are
only slightly so; the second is a gorgeously tuneful Andante, the Finale
a Russian dance. Chronologically, of course, Hollywood has nothing to
do with Bortkiewicz and his First Concerto. Dedicated to his wife, the
work was premiered in 1912 (and published the following year), after
which it was taken up enthusiastically.
Like Arensky, Bortkiewicz
was Russian (he was born in Kharkov, 16 February 1877) and studied at
the St Petersburg Conservatory—in his spare time at first, for his
father insisted that he study law. ‘I inherited my mother’s pleasure in
music-making’, he wrote. ‘And what a blessing it was that we made much
music when I was young. My mother played the piano very well and I was
passionately fond of music.’
Later, from 1900 to 1902, he studied
at the Leipzig Conservatory—piano with the former Liszt pupil Alfred
Reisenauer (1863–1907), and composition with Salomon Jadassohn
(1831–1902), another erstwhile Liszt student and among the most
celebrated German pedagogues of the time, famously arch-conservative in
his codified views on harmony and counterpoint.
Unlike some of
his Russian contemporaries (Rachmaninov, Medtner, Scriabin) Bortkiewicz
was not a sufficiently gifted pianist to make a career as a soloist,
though after his debut (Munich, 1902) he made several European tours. He
made no records or piano rolls and while one critic felt he produced a
‘harsh, jarring sound’ others give the impression of him being only a
capable player, at his best in his own works. His strengths, he
eventually decided, were teaching and composition. He taught at the
Klindworth-Scharwenka Conservatory in Berlin from 1904 until the
outbreak of the First World War when he was forced to return to Russia.
After the Revolution he left his native land, like so many never to
return again, and after a peripatetic existence, including a two-year
stay in (then) Constantinople, Bortkiewicz finally settled in Vienna in
1922, dying there in October 1952.
‘I am a Romantic and a
melodist’, he wrote in an essay towards the end of his life, ‘and as
such and in spite of my distaste for the so-called ‘modern’, atonal and
cacophonic music, I do hope that I composed some noteworthy works
without getting the reputation of being an epigone or imitator of
composers who lived before me.’ Bortkiewicz’s compositions are dominated
by those for his instrument and many are well worth investigating
(Lamentations and Consolations, Op 17, for example, and some of the
Preludes from Opp 13, 15, 33 and 40, Lyrica Nova Op 59 from 1940, and
the 1907 Piano Sonata No 1 in B major, Op 9). Perhaps, like the present
Concerto (he wrote two others), they lack profundity and originality in
the widest sense. But does the only music we appreciate have to be by
the great composers who overturned systems, struck out for the unknown,
and challenged their muse? One hopes not. There must always be a place
for those like Arensky and Bortkiewicz who reflect so elegantly and
expertly on what has gone before, rather than shake us by the ears and
grab us (sometimes screaming) into the future. Hyperion
Anton Arensky (1861-1906)
Piano Concerto in F minor Op 2 [25'35]
Sergei Bortkiewicz (1877-1952)
Piano Concerto No 1 in B flat major Op 16 [35'34]
Credits :
Conductor – Jerzy Maksymiuk
Leader – Geoffrey Trabichoff
Orchestra – BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra
Piano – Stephen Coombs
quinta-feira, 7 de março de 2024
ARENSKY : Piano Concerto In F Minor, Op 2 • Fantasia On Russian Folksongs, Op 48 ♦ BORTKIEWICZ : Piano Concerto No 1 In B Flat, Op 16 (Stephen Coombs · BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra · Jerzy Maksymiuk) (1993) Serie The Romantic Piano Concerto – 4 | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
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