The extensive works of Charles Valentin Alkan remain largely
overshadowed in international concert repertoire. Nevertheless Alkan has
had his champions, such as the co-editor of his music, Isidore Philipp
(1863–1958) and Ferruccio Busoni (1866–1924), who regarded him as one of
the five greatest composers of piano music after Beethoven, with
Chopin, Schumann, Liszt and Brahms, and shocked the Berlin public with
the massive Alkan cadenza for the Third Piano Concerto of Beethoven.
Others included the pianists Sergey Rachmaninov (1873–1943), Harold
Bauer (1873–1951) and Egon Petri (1881–1962), who played music by Alkan,
although, regrettably, only occasionally. More recently the pianist
Raymond Lewenthal (1926–1988) created a sensation with his broadcasts of
music by Alkan, while the English pianist Ronald Smith (1922–) remains
an almost monomaniac interpreter of Alkan, as head of the London Alkan
Society and author of the first monograph on the composer, published in
two volumes in 1976, a notable work.
All these efforts, however,
have not so far succeeded in bringing about a radical Alkan renaissance.
This is partly a matter of conservative musical taste. The generation
of virtuosi, piano teachers and gifted amateurs, that, since the middle
of the last century, by the constant study and performance of the music
of Alkan’s contemporaries Chopin, Schumann and Liszt, has established
their works as of lasting cultural value in the eyes of a wider group of
people, has failed to mobilise opinion in favour of Alkan. Although he
was a great virtuoso of the piano, he gave few concerts, particularly
after the year of fate 1848, and consequently had too few pupils of
ability and generally led the life of a recluse in his native city of
Paris, which he virtually never left. He published his works
spasmodically over the years, living the rigorous life of one dedicated
to composition.
The fact that Alkan’s works include no
symphonies, operas, oratorios or songs excluded him from the usual means
in his century of reaching a wider audience. Quite decisive then and
now for the general receplion of Alkan’s music is also the
uncompromising nature of his piano-orientated creativity, shown in his
tendency to short sketches (48 Esquisses, Op. 63), his courage in
tackling macro-structures of unheard of length (Etudes up to thirty
minutes long), harmonic and formal irony, as it were in the manner of
Prokofiev, modernistic motor impetus, as in Le chemin de fer and Allegro
barbaro, perplexing banality, an anticipation of Mahler, underlying
enigmatic irony, a foretaste of Satie, and, last not least, the
sometimes excessive technical demands, greater than the transcendental
challenge of Liszt.
The visionary strength of this Quasi-Faust, a
movement title in his Piano Sonata Op. 33, is also evident in the three
chamber works that Alkan wrote. The first of these, research has
established (Harry Halbreich in An Alkan Reader published by Fayard in
1991), was the Trio for piano, violin and bass in G minor, Op. 30.
Published in 1841, the work, possibly written sometime earlier, starts
Assez largement with a theme of rhythmic energy, which is to be
contrasted with a lyrical second subject. The almost continuous flow of
semi-quavers is concise, with the transitions between the sections of
the movement cleverly hidden. In the middle the thematic material
appears in masterly simultaneous polyphony, partly the climax of the
development, partly recapitulation in the major. In the Scherzo, also in
G minor, there is a rapid and witty exchange between the instruments in
contrast with the dark bass melody of the Trio. The G major Lentement
offers novelty of formal structure. In the classical simplicity of the
four-part string writing abruptly appears a piano cadenza in the manner
of Tchaikovsky (Alkan notes, with a wink, “Le violon et le basse
comptent”). The introduction is repeated in shorter and intenser form
and a short exchange leads to an orchestral tremolo covering the extreme
range of the three instruments. The Finale, in 6/8, demands above all
of the pianist a tremendous perpetuum mobile. Violin and cello, for the
most part in exchange each with the other, propose a motivic and
rhythmic counterpoint, until the appearance of the major coda, in which
the rapid semiquaver movement is taken up by the strings.
Alkan’s
Violin Sonata, the Grand Duo concertant pour piano et violon, in
F-sharp minor, Op. 21, was probably written about 1840. The choice of
key, F-sharp minor and major and related keys, shows that the composer,
who himself also played the violin to some extent, treats the violin as
he did the piano, evident too in the particular lay-out of the violin
part, with its octaves in the highest positions. The first movement of
the sonata offers a contrast between the archaic contour of the opening
and the soaring secondary theme in D major, repeated three times, the
third time “avec exaltation”. The heart of the work lies, without
question, in the slow movement, L’enfer (“Hell”), which offers an
unprecedented vision of the darkest abyss. The extreme closely spaced
dissonances in the deepest range of the piano create a song of mourning.
The brilliant Finale, to be played as fast as possible, fluctuates
between a hectic perpetuum mobile and a fragmented and sometimes
syncopated melodic outline. Alkan dedicated his Violin Sonata, which is
here presented for the first time on compact disc, to the Belgian-born
violinist and composer Chrétien Urhan (1790–1845).
Among the
cello sonatas of the nineteenth century, after the five by Beethoven
written between 1796 and 1815 and Chopin’s Opus 65 of 1845/6 but before
the two by Brahms, written in 1865 and 1886, Alkan’s Cello Sonata in E
major of 1856, Op. 47, occupies an important position, significant in
the development of the form. The arrangement of the string part is as
rigorous as that of the violin sonatas, with four homogeneous and
complementary movements. The cyclical arrangement of keys, E major,
A-flat major, C major and E minor, is striking. The opening Allegro
molto, in classical first movement form, starts in singing style. The
expansive development section has frequent exchanges of scale passages
and a working of motivic detail concentrated often into expressive
fugati. The 6/8 Siciliano of the Allegrettino creates an apparently
simple bass which, through surprising turns of harmony, offers a degree
of uncertainty. In the rich chromaticism there lies a certain sarcasm,
typical of Alkan’s humour. The Jewish believer Alkan prefaces the Adagio
with a quotation from the Old Testament (Micah V. vii) “As dew from the
Lord how the Jewish people endure, awaiting help from God alone”. The
gently sentimental cello theme seems to be inspired by Jewish sacred
music. A clearly modern rhythmic element appears against the piano
cantilena in the plucked notes of the cello. The sonata ends with a
virtuoso Finale alla saltarella. Here the technical demands on both
players stand alone in the musical literature of the nineteenth century.
The Sonata, like the Trio dedicated to James Odier, was first performed
by Auguste Franchomme, the dedicatee and first performer of Chopin’s
Cello Sonata, and Alkan himself in Paris on 27th April 1857. Rainer Klass, naxos
Charles-Valentin Alkan (1813-1888)
1-3. Grand Duo Concertant In F Sharp Minor, Op. 21 (21:39)
4-7. Sonate De Concert In E Major, Op. 47 (32:18)
8-11. Trio In G Minor, Op. 30 (21:10)
Ensemble – Trio Alkan
Cello – Bernhard Schwarz (tracks: 4 to 7, 8 to 11)
Piano – Rainer Klaas
Violin – Kolja Lessing (tracks: 1 to 3, 8 to 11)
segunda-feira, 7 de abril de 2025
CHARLES VALENTIN ALKAN : Chamber Music (Trio Alkan) (1992) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
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