Anyone familiar with the unfailing digits and seemingly inexhaustible
energy of Canadian pianist Marc-André Hamelin would find the very
prospect of his recording Charles-Valentin Alkan's giga-difficult
Concerto for solo piano as a natural match of pianist and piece. This
50-minute mega-monstrosity -- the first movement alone lasts nearly a
half an hour, and runs to more than 70 pages -- has been played only by
pianists intrepid and skilled enough to make the voyage, the short list
including Egon Petri, Alkan acolyte Ronald Smith, and John Ogdon, in one
of his finest recorded outings. With Hamelin, this Hyperion release
Alkan: Concerto for Solo Piano is all the more amazing as this is his
second recorded traversal of the work, having done an earlier version
for the Music & Arts label in 1993. What the 13-year interim has
yielded is a deepening of Hamelin's interpretation, to the point where
the rapid fire runs, leaping octaves, and thundering crescendos that
characterize the work have become second nature and Hamelin is able to
mainly concentrate on making Alkan's concerto sound like the glorious
vision that it is. And that's not to mean the earlier recording was
necessarily "bad," it's just that in the meantime he has achieved total
independence from the technical challenge that Alkan's concerto
represents.
This work is such a trip; it is a combination of
symphony and concerto where all of the orchestral and solo parts are
wound into just the two hands of the pianist. Apart from the first
movement, it has a searing Adagio at its center and the Allegretto
finale is marked alla barabaresca. As Brobdingnagian as the concerto is,
however, Alkan never digresses; it is taut and completely strict in a
formal sense even as it is likely the most expansive work for piano solo
that the nineteenth century has to offer. Hamelin has mastered it, a
feat so awesome that it almost makes one forget that the Hyperion disc
also offers a late and lovely Alkan work as filler, the Third Book of
the Recueil de Chants (1863), never before recorded in its entirety;
Raymond Lewenthal recorded the Barcarolle alone on his groundbreaking
RCA Victor LP Piano Music of Alkan in 1965. In a sense, Hyperion's
Alkan: Concerto for solo piano illustrates how far we've come with Alkan
in nearly five decades' time; from the enterprising, exploratory
readings of Lewenthal in the 1960s to total command of Alkan's
"impossible" pianist language in the 2000s. The one thing Alkan lacks is
a place in the standard literature, and it doesn't appear as though
he's ever going to have that, though if anyone can operate at the
exalted level of advocacy that such a transition of thinking about Alkan
would require, then Marc-André Hamelin is probably the man. Uncle Dave Lewis
Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888)
1-3. Concerto For Solo Piano Op 39 Nos 8-10 (49:35)
4-9. Troisième Recueil De Chants Op 65 (17:57)
Credits :
Piano – Marc-André Hamelin
Front illustration : The Kiss of the Vampire (1916) by Boleslas Biegas (1877-1954)
segunda-feira, 7 de abril de 2025
ALKAN : Concerto for solo piano · Troisième recueil de chants (Marc-André Hamelin) (2007) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
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