Alexander Melnikov has already made a number of recordings of chamber music using historic pianos – Beethoven piano trios on an instrument made by Alois Graff in the 1820s, Schumann on a Streicher
of 20 years later – and his latest disc extends those explorations into
the solo repertoire, with a different piano for each of the four works
he plays. So we hear the Wanderer Fantasy played on that same,
beautifully restored Graff, made in Vienna around the time of Schubert’s
death and now part of Melnikov’s own collection, while he uses an 1837
Érard for Chopin’s Op 10 Studies and an 1875 Bösendorfer for Liszt’s
Reminiscences of Don Juan, before opting for a modern Steinway for the
Three Movements from Stravinsky’s Petrushka.
Melnikov played the same programme at the Wigmore Hall in London
earlier in the month, though using three different pianos rather than
the four here, and the results on disc seem more convincing – less
cluttered and congested – than they were in the concert hall. He makes
good use of the tonal differences between registers on the Graff in the
Wanderer Fantasy and exploits the light touch of the Érard to brilliant
effect in the more bravura Chopin studies, while the Bösendorfer
(missing from the London recital) produces a leaner sound than the
maker’s later instruments. It’s odd that Melnikov uses a Steinway for
his dashing performance of the Stravinsky; surely in this context a
French piano from the beginning of the 20th century – a Pleyel, say –
would have been more appropriate? Even with that opportunity missed,
though, this is still a really rewarding disc that’s well worth
investigating. (Andrew Clements / The Guardian)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario