The backstory is a marketer's dream: pianist Paul Wee was a child
prodigy who was playing concertos with major orchestras by 12, traveled
to New York to study, but then abandoned his career to study law and
became a successful London barrister. Except he didn't abandon it. Wee
not only continued to play; he specialized in the music of
Charles-Valentin Alkan, the mid-19th century composer whose works are
still rarely recorded due to their sheer difficulty. In 2015 and 2016,
he gave a pair of recitals at the Alkan Society in London, and a tape
was sent to the BIS label in Sweden. The end result was this release,
perhaps the first one to contain both Alkan's Symphony for Solo Piano
and Concerto for Solo Piano. Both works, part of a larger series of
etudes, are technically hazardous but find room for symphonic effects in
the former and "tutti" and "solo" markings, Alkan's own, in the latter.
Sample the 30-minute first movement of the Concerto for Solo Piano. It
is a sheer storm of notes that taxes the stamina of any pianist who
attempts it, but it contains expressive interludes to which Wee does
justice. There are other recordings of Alkan on the market, notably
those of Marc-André Hamelin, whose style Wee resembles, but there are
none with a story as compelling as Wee's. James Manheim
Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888)
1-4. Symphony For Solo Piano, Nos 4–7 Of Douze Études Dans Tous Les Tons Mineurs, Op.39 (26:16)
5-7. Concerto For Solo Piano, Nos 8–10 Of Douze Études Dans Tous Les Tons Mineurs, Op.39 (51:30)
Credits:
Grand Piano, Liner Notes – Paul Wee
segunda-feira, 31 de março de 2025
ALKAN : Symphony for solo piano • Concerto for solo piano (Paul Wee) (2019) SACD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
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