
In the fourth volume of his cycle of Busoni's piano music for Naxos,
pianist Wolf Harden tackles some of the most important pieces in
Busoni's solo repertoire; the Six Elegies, the Toccata: Preludio --
Fantasia -- Ciaccona, and the Fantasia nach J.S. Bach. Harden fills out
the program with appropriate, contextually related choices; the
Bach/Busoni Prelude and Fugue in D, BWV 532, originally for organ, and
the seldom recorded piano solo version of the Berceuse Elegiaque,
subtitled by Busoni as "Elegy No. 7." One would expect in such
emotionally wrought Busoni -- the Berceuse is a memorial to his mother,
as is the Fantasia to his father -- that Harden would be firing on all
cylinders here. In a technical sense, he is; the execution aspect of the
whole disc is impressive apart from a transition or two that come off
as abrupt. However, Harden takes the Elegies a shade faster than most,
and the underlying dance rhythms -- usually muted owing to slower tempi
-- become the detail that plays to the foreground. In making such tempo
choices, Harden's Elegies come off as being rather strident and he loses
the sense of shrouded mystery that these pieces are normally associated
with, and that doesn't seem like an appropriate trade-off. This may be
the result of a conceptual misunderstanding; though Busoni was a pioneer
of neo-classical thinking in music, the Elegies in particular are
closer to the realm of Liszt than they are of Prokofiev. In any event,
it is somehow encouraging that twenty first century pianists are able to
take piano pieces once thought barely possible and perform them in a
manner that's almost blasé. In this matter, a bit more give would've
yielded expressive results in this music, such as is customary, but one
cannot fault Harden for playing such extraordinarily difficult piano
music with such proficiency, it's just an additional flair for drama,
mood, and suspense that is lacking.
Uncle Dave Lewis Performance
occupied much of Busoni’s attention until the turn of the twentieth
century, when composition began to assume a new importance in his
career. Busoni regarded his Elegien as the point where he discovered his
true identity as a composer. Even at his most radical, however, Busoni
never rejected what had gone before; the Elegien alternate between new
works and transcriptions of older pieces. Drawing on Bach organ pieces,
Fantasia after J.S. Bach may sound backwardlooking in context, but its
concept points determinedly towards the future. Toccata was completed
while Busoni was engaged in earnest on his crowning achievement, the
music-drama Doktor Faust, whose essence pervades this most virtuosic yet
also aggressive of the composer’s later piano works.
naxos
Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
1-2. Prelude And Fugue In D Major, BWV 532 (11:14)
3-8. Elegien, K.249 (29:09)
9. Berceuse, "Elegie No. 7", K.252 (4:32)
10. Fantasia Nach J. S. Bach, K.253 (9:43)
11. Toccata, K.287 (Preludio - Fantasia - Ciaccona) 9:39
Piano – Wolf Harden
https://it.d-ld.net/10c69faa34/Busoni — Piano Music · Vol. 4 -Wolf Harden (2008, Naxos – 8.570543 GER) FLAC.rar
ResponderExcluir