The name of Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari (1876-1948) is now emerging from the
shadow cast by his wartime collaboration with Italy’s Fascist regime.
Operas such as I quattro rusteghi and I gioielli della Madonna occupy a
place on the fringes of the repertoire, and Brilliant Classics have made
a persuasive case for him as a composer of chamber music in a
post-Brahmsian mould with the release of his piano trios.
This album was recommended by Classics Today for the ‘eloquently sustained’
performance of Trio Archè, displaying ‘a whimsical discursiveness… that
might be described as the lovechild of Schubert and Fauré.’ Much the
same might be said of Wolf-Ferrari’s piano music on the evidence of this
new recording by the Italian pianist Costantino Catena, who has made
many well-received albums with the Camerata Tokyo. To open the album,
Catena has made his own completion of an early, substantial (19-minute)
Bagatelle that Wolf-Ferrari left unfinished. Theatricality and high
contrast mark the Bagatelle throughout, as one would expect from an
experienced composer for the stage, and they lend beguiling variety to
the other first recordings here, of Variations on the minuet from
Verdi’s Falstaff, a Chopin-Phantasie in B minor and a Scherzino, all
dating from Wolf-Ferrari’s prodigious twenties when he was the toast of
new Italian music.
Wolf-Ferrari turned to the Romantic genre of
character-piece in three Impromptus Op.13 (1904) and three Klavierstücke
Op.14 (1905), but he addressed the form in a personal and authentic
manner. Some of the rhythmic sophistication may remind us of Brahms, and
the delicately embroidered harmony of Hugo Wolf, but Wolf-Ferrari’s
characteristic sweetness of tone does not descend into decorative
mannerism or affected sentimentalism: he was, to the core, a
German-Italian composer with a foot on both sides of the Alps.
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