Cédric Tiberghien's first CD for Hyperion of Bartok's piano music was
brilliant from start to finish (reviewed in June 2016). The 47 tracks
of this new one are of the same standard, barring just one: his account
of Allegro barbaro is polite, neatly controlled and utterly lacking in
anything remotely 'barbaric'. For the rest, his approach is admirably
responsive as he explores, one by one, the enticing little abodes of
Bartók's great compositional experiment. Who would dream that a piece
entitled 'Major seconds broken and together'—and lasting less than two
minutes—could constitute a uniquely beautiful sound world?
Bartok
described his 4 Bagatelles—with their implicit nod back to Beethoven—a
representing 'a new piano style… a reaction to the exuberance of
Romantic piano music of the 19th century; a style stripped of all
unnecessary decorative elements, deliberately using only the most
restricted technical means.' Those words could apply to almost
everything on this disc.
As David Cooper observes in his
illuminating liner note, the first of these Bagatelles—to be played in
four sharps in the right hand, and four flats in the left—was one of the
earliest essays in bi-tonality by a European composer, and in
Tiberghien's hands it becomes both simple-seeming and profoundly
challenging. He gives the Folk Dances and the Eight Improvisations
a relaxed and full-blooded sound evoking courtships and comic
mock-fights through their furious or flirtatiously irregular, tempos.
He's sparing with the pedal, but on occasions uses it to make simple
figurations sound bewitching, most notably in Bagatelle No 12, which
prefigures the 'night music' style of later works. Intimate and poetic,
this is pianism which delicately suggests rather than making statements.
A lovely hour and a quarter. (Michael Church / BBC Music Magazine)
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