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Monthly Archives: December 2020

Dinu Lipatti: 70 Years Later

December 12

In commemoration of the 70th anniversary of Dinu Lipatti’s death on December 2, 1950, a collection of commercial and unofficial recordings arranged in a recital format.

My own introduction to Lipatti’s playing came in 1985, when I was in my teens and had just discovered historical piano recordings. That was 35 years after Lipatti died – and now another 35 years have passed. I had no idea when I first saw his name in an Angel Records sampler with the somewhat morbid title, ‘Dinu Lipatti’s Last Recital,’ that I would be as involved with his legacy as I have been. Over the course of the last three decades particularly, I have had several trips to Europe to meet Lipatti’s friends and students, and visited archives and private collections in an attempt to locate and have released rare recordings that showed the fuller capabilities of this great pianist’s artistry than is revealed by the handful of recordings he made for EMI over the course of the last few years of his life.

I had no clue that some of my findings would upturn much of the official narrative. Many of the best-known anecdotes about the pianist – that he wanted three or four years to prepare the Tchaikovsky or Emperor Concertos, that he only played Beethoven Sonatas in the last two years of his life, that he was reluctant to record due to his perfectionism – turned out to be completely false. I still recall how my jaw dropped when, at the EMI archives, I held with my own hands copies of memos signed by his producer Walter Legge that stated Lipatti had agreed in 1948 to record Tchaikovsky’s Concerto in 1949, and that Lipatti himself requested to record a Beethoven Concerto, when he was the one who had spread the aforementioned stories of Lipatti’s reticence to record or play these works! Memo after memo revealed that a lack of foresight and bad luck had unfortunately conspired to limit Lipatti’s recorded output to a handful of small-scale works that only hint at the fullness of his interpretative powers. How tragic that he did not record Beethoven’s Waldstein Sonata (which he played regularly in the last decade of his life, not just the last two years), or Schumann’s Etudes symphoniques, as he’d requested EMI to do, or Ravel’s Le tombeau de Couperin – or other shorter works, such as Debussy’s La soirée dans Grenade and Falla’s Ritual Fire Dance, both of which were scheduled to be recorded but for some reason weren’t.

Lipatti often played recitals featuring an array of works from Baroque to 20th century, in chronological sequence, sometimes centred around one main work. The collection here features some of the works he most regularly programmed, in similar groupings: he often paired these two Bach chorales in this order, as well as the first of the two Scarlatti Sonatas presented here (unfortunately a recording of the third usually grouped with these has not been salvaged). One of the central works he often played in these recitals was Chopin’s Third Sonata, which is featured here, grouped with other solo Chopin works as he often did. (Among the other large-scale works that often figured in his recitals were the aforementioned Beethoven Waldstein, Schumann Etudes symphoniques, and Ravel Le tombeau de Couperin.)

He also regularly put together two or three Brahms solo works – I’ve included four as none of these are part of Lipatti’s studio discography and because these particular performances reveal so much of his interpretative genius. It is also unfortunate that we do not have the two works that he most often paired with Ravel’s Alborada del Gracioso – Debussy’s La soirée dans Grenade and Falla’s Ritual Fire Dance – but ending with this most vivacious recording of the pianist seemed a fitting end to this tribute recital.

Fortunately even in the last couple of years – well over half a century after the pianist died – new recordings, photographs, and other material have come to light which enable a fuller apprehension of Lipatti and his artistry. Let us hope that more will continue to be found and made available. I am in collaboration with several dedicated Lipatti researchers – his biographer Grigore Bargauanu, Romanian scholars Monica Isacescu and Stefan Costache, and British researcher Orlando Murrin (whose findings the last few years have been groundbreaking) – to continue to locate and publish as much as possible what we can find.

At the bottom of this page, you will find the ‘recital’ that I have composed based on recordings made by Lipatti between 1941 and 1950, in a variety of circumstances. I hope you enjoy the performances, and would ask that you consider purchasing the releases that have featured these performances when possible. Details about the published recordings can be found at the bottom of the page.

Dinu Lipatti: A 70th Anniversary Anthology ‘Recital’

Bach-Busoni: Nun komm, der Heiden Heiland

Bach-Hess: Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring

Scarlatti: Three Sonatas:

G Major K.9

G Minor K.450

D Minor K.14

Chopin:

Sonata No.3 in B Minor Op.58

Waltz No.2 in A-Flat Major Op.34 No.1

Two Etudes: Op.25 No.5 and Op.10 No.5

Liszt:

Two Etudes: La Leggierezza and Gnomernreigen

Brahms:

Intermezzo in E-Flat Major (abbr.) Op.117 No.1

Intermezzo in A Minor (abbr.) Op.116 No.2

Intermezzo in C Major Op.119 No.3

Capriccio in D Minor Op.116 No.7

Ravel: Alborada del Gracioso

The link to play it in your browser:

https://hearthis.at/the-piano-files/lipatti-anthology-recital/BZt/

The recordings featured:

Bach chorales taken from Opus Kura’s wonderful release of these recordings: https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/7990304–dinu-lipatti-studio-recordings-in-geneva-july-1950

Scarlatti G minor and G major Sonatas among recent discoveries released on Marston Records: https://www.marstonrecords.com/products/landmarks1

Scarlatti D Minor Sonata, Chopin Sonata, and Chopin Waltz from APR’s new release of Lipatti’s Abbey Road recordings: https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8784565–lipatti-the-complete-columbia-recordings-1947-1948

Chopin Etudes transferred by Werner Unger on our 2000 ‘Cornerstones’ tribute CD: https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8020233–les-inedits

Two Liszt Etudes from my co-produced set Les Inedits on Unger’s archiphon label, now out of print – Gnomenreigen here featured from new source material. https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8020233–les-inedits

First two Brahms Intermezzi from 1995 and 2000 releases I co-produced with Unger on his archiphon label, now only available digitally: https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8020227–dinu-lipatti-cornerstones-1936-1950

Second two Brahms works on Marston Records’ Landmarks of Recorded Pianism Vol.1: https://www.marstonrecords.com/products/landmarks1

Ravel’s Alborada from APR’s new set of Lipatti’s Abbey Road recordings: https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/8784565–lipatti-the-complete-columbia-recordings-1947-1948

Dearly Departed

December 12

For World AIDS Day today, Stephen Hough posted on his Twitter feed today (click here) my upload of Villa’s jaw-dropping account of Rachmaninoff’s Second Sonata (click here for the recording), a private recording of a 1991 Bargemusic performance that was my own introduction to the pianist’s playing. It arrived on a cassette sent to me by International Piano Archives co-founder Gregor Benko about a month after the performance and within a year I was able to meet Villa in New York through Benko’s introduction. We would remain in regular contact until he died a few years later – I still have all the Christmas cards and signed programmes he sent me, and his cassettes – and in commemoration of the 25th anniversary of his passing this past April I prepared this detailed tribute on my website (click here). 

Here is a tribute to some of the great pianists lost to the scourge of AIDS, in chronological order of their deaths.

 

It was not widely known that Jorge Bolet died from complications due to AIDS but that is in fact the case (I was shown a copy of his death certificate by his friend Gregor Benko not long after his passing). A stupendous artist whose recognition came later in life, Bolet was both a poet and titanic virtuoso. Until Gregor Benko played me a cassette of the Cuban pianist playing a Chopin-Godowsky Etude that had been privately recorded after a master class, I had only been aware of his more poetic readings that were lacking in some fire. I still remember the sunlight shining through the window of his office as the most volcanic playing erupted from a portable cassette player, completely shattering my preconceptions of this artist. Here is another performance of Bolet in that same work, from a concert in Hamburg:

 

Natan Brand was a brilliant Israeli-American pianist who died 30 years ago this month, though the cause was not originally made public for the sake of his children and family. My colleague Bryan Crimp of the APR label produced the first CD tribute to the artist, which features stunning pianism; the second set a decade later was produced by my university-years friend in Montreal, Jean-Pascal Hamelin. I have since come to know Brand’s widow, who made a number of additional recordings available, including the video footage that I have uploaded on YouTube and featured on my website (click here). A previously unissued performance by the artist will soon be shared for the 30th anniversary of his death – for now, his truly impassioned concert performance of  Schumann’s Kreisleriana – a desert-island performance:

 

Joseph Villa was unknown to most piano fans at the time that he became known to me, and the fact that it was presumed he would not survive was truly challenging for me to process in my early 20s when Benko introduced me to his playing. Here he is in an utterly glorious 1989 concert performance of Liszt’s transcription of Beethoven’s Symphony No.5. Villa plays with truly orchestral colours, voicing and layering lines with incredible dimension, without any harshness of tone and with phenomenal rhythmic vitality and subtlety of nuance. A staggering reading by one of the great unsung champions of the piano!

 

Spanish pianist Rafael Orozco perished in 1996 at the age of 50. His playing was featured in Ken Russell’s 1970 film about Tchaikovsky, The Music Lovers, and he had an acclaimed international career. A marvellous exponent of Romantic music, he was also a master at the music of his native Spain, as this terrific film footage of the artist playing Albaicín by Albéniz demonstrates.

 

Youri Egorov was a stupendous pianist whose gifts were apparent at a very young age, his musical maturity and superb technique resulting in remarkable interpretations in a wide range of repertoire. His death in 1988 at the age of 33 in the midst of the AIDS crisis was a tragic loss to the musical world; it is a little-known fact that as his health worsened dramatically, he chose to have himself euthanized after a farewell gathering with friends.

A number of concert recordings have filled out a discography that was regrettably limited due to his early death, among them readings of works he did not record commercially such as the Shostakovich Sonata No.2. In contemporary music, Egorov was a master of playing with a sumptuous tonal palette, evocative pedal effects, and clarity of structure, without any harshness of sound. His reading of the third movement of this sonata is particularly remarkable for its evocative mood and how time seems to stand still: impeccable phrasing, discreet accenting and transparent voicing that highlight harmony and structure, and ravishing tone are among the hallmarks of his playing here.

 

 

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