| REVIEWS: divine art dda 25081 Vladimir Rebikov piano music |
![]() |
FANFARE: If the above quote doesn't intrigue you, your musical curiosity is dead and should be buried in the back yard next to your late, lamented pet dog or cat. If you don't believe it, then simply buy this disc and hear for yourself. Rebikov was a genius of monumental proportions—one might say the Russian Alkan—who wrote in exactly the opposite dimensions. Whereas Alkan's music is extremely long (he is sometimes described as the Mahler of the piano), Rebikov wrote in short, terse statements. Of the 42(!) pieces on this CD, none run longer than two and a half minutes with the lone exception of his “musical-psychological tableau,” Esclavage et liberté. Most of them—I kid you not—run a minute and 40 seconds or less (34 of them, to be exact). Rebikov was not a composer who wasted your time, but ironically I think it is because his musical statements are so terse that he was rarely if ever programmed in recitals. Indeed, I'd say there is another connection to Alkan, that this disc by Goldstone is as much a revelation of Rebikov's genius—and as spectacularly played—as the late Raymond Lewenthal's 1963 RCA Victor LP was revelatory of Alkan. The proof is all there in the listening. Rebikov's strange alchemy of Alkan, Debussy, Scriabin, Satie, Stravinsky, Prokofiev, et al., leaps out at the listener with stunning audacity. Describing these short, compact, almost enigmatic works is virtually impossible. Even Goldstone has trouble doing so in his liner notes, and he's the performer! And since he appears to be an excellent note writer as well, I shall let he who has actually seen these scores, and doesn't just analyze by ear, make a few comments: Les Démons s'amusent: “At 19 seconds into The Devils Amuse Themselves … the central melody strikingly anticipates the sinister ostinato that begins at figure 65 of Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring.” Esclavage et liberté: “The opening section, with its idée fixe of a descending chromatic scale—a moan or cry of anguish (later becoming a scream)—ideally requires three hands. Passages of plaintive recitative express self-doubt or inner turmoil, and sudden impulses take the music off in new directions. … There are interesting similarities with Schoenberg's Verklärte Nacht … which Rebikov could not have known, as, although it had been composed in 1899, it was premiered in 1902 and published only in 1905.” Trois Idylles: “For the cover [to the sheet music] Jurgenson commissioned an illustration of fantastical creatures: a mermaid, a frog prince, Pan, a witch, and others. The contents are hardly less odd. Bar lines and time signatures are absent from all three pieces. The solemn Hymn to the Sun … features parallel motion and intervals of a fourth and makes extensive use of note clusters, the majority of which include every white note in the span of an octave, to be played ‘with the edge of the palm.' The American Henry Cowell and the Russian-American Leo Ornstein, later credited as pioneers in this field, had yet to begin their work.” Scènes bucoliques: “Here there is an attempt to evoke the spirit … of ancient Greece: old modes are used in the first four [pieces]; … the mercurial fifth, Round of the Elves, is built largely by stacking up minor thirds and eventually evaporates into thin air.” Parmi eux [“Among Them”]: “portrays giant alien creatures that live in a parallel, whole-tone, world. … The first [piece], entitled The Males Dance, is heavy-footed and clumsy. Dance with a Bell features syncopated gong-like bass notes, after which a hypnotic Berceuse sends the baby off to sleep. Dance of the Quadrupeds, perhaps the aliens' proportionately huge, lumbering equivalent to our pet dog, brings to mind the more sluggish bear in Pétrouchka.” There's a lot more in the notes (and music) than this, of course, but I hope this gives you a taste of what you'll experience in listening. As for the performances, Goldstone is a pianist of formidable technique and astonishing coordination. Not only are both hands always in perfect synch, but (again) like Lewenthal, he makes the difficult sound easy without underplaying the drama in so many of these short works. Discovering missing links in classical music is always fun as well as instructive. Rebikov is one more missing link, as once were Gossec, Spontini, and Alkan. I cannot recommend this disc highly enough. It should be in the library of any serious student of modern music, and the best part is that these pieces are as enjoyable as they are visionary. AUDIOPHILE AUDITION: CLASSICS ONLINE: This album does very well to dispel this notion. Rebikov was an innovator with modest ability; he was the one who invented palm clusters (before Cowell), and wrote a piece completely in whole-tone scale (way before Debussy). All of these landmark pieces, including a suite completely in white keys (Chansons Blanches), are included in this album, played with musicality by Goldstone. Other than being an innovator, he was a master of the simple forms he wielded with ease. Consider the interesting ideas and endings of Promenade of the Gnomes, The Music Lesson, and Rondes des Elfes and you might see why. While they may not have the substance of great masterworks, they are enjoyable to listen to and are very accessible, as they have very clear melodic lines and 2-2-4 music phrases. Even in his Tchaikovsky-like pieces in the suite Feuilles d'Automne, Rebikov used a few musical devices (such as obsessive repetition) that made them his own, rivaling even some of The Seasons in terms of melody and form. For example, the comforting ending of the fourth movement, Con dolore, in contrast with its sad beginnings, exhibits a very rare poignancy that only Rebikov can provide. In short, this is a rather valuable premiere of Rebikov's music. The other one which I have heard, a little known album by Sheludyakov, is too ponderous and vastly inferior to this album, where the tempos are suitable. If you want to explore more unknown composers who are simple yet enjoyable to listen to, this is highly recommended. “JY89484” MUSICA (Italy) (joint review of vols 1-5): The four composers of the monographic CDs represent, in the Russian music scene, as many different positions, equidistant from both Romanticism and Impressionism, for sure closer to Tchaikovsky than to Mussorgsky and the Group of Five; and in the case of Rebikov and Glière, who died in 1920 and 1956 – the modernistic poetics from the 20th century. Having lived a short and profligate life, Anton Arensky left less rich a production than he could have. Still, he wrote a hundred pieces for piano, inspired by the romanticism of Chopin and Tchaikovsky, which informed his work to the utmost. He also taught Rachmaninov and Scriabin. These days Arensky is mainly renowned for the lovely waltz from the first Suite for two pianos, but his Studies and Preludes are valuable too; and mainly the six Essais sur des rythmes oubliées , Op.28, with its unusual metres. Sergei Lyapunov (who lived a longer and more sober life than Arensky but one which was no more productive) was also a great romantic, in the line of Chopin, Liszt and Anton Rubinstein, but in his works the popular Russian tradition is more present, because he was a close friend and pupil of Balakirev, father of the “Five”, who dedicated to Lyapunov the Sonata for piano he finally completed in 1905. In answer to this Lyapunov composed the Sonata Goldstone plays here. If Arensky is renowned for his lovely waltz, works by Lyapunov are performed too every now and then, mainly during the conservatoire exams: especially some of the twelve Transcendental Studies that complete the tonal cycle Liszt started with his works of this name. The CD includes the sonata and some other works, the well-known Fêtes de Noël , Op.41, among them. Vladimir Rebikov, the third of these composers to be born in the 1860s, died in 1920; though far less renowned than the two abovementioned, he produced a much more innovative musical language: Stravinsky himself mentions him in this sense. His innovations anticipate certain harmonic aspects of the 20th century (whole-tone system, unresolved harmonies, pieces without bars and metre, tone clusters). At the beginning of the CD Goldstone performs two short pieces where Rebikov anticipates two moments that are reminiscent of both Stravinsky ( Le sacre du printemps ) and Messiaen ( Quatuor pour la fin du temps ). Apart from this peculiarity, Rebikov's piano production, also because of his natural bent for teaching, is made up of short and very short pieces (on the CD sixteen out of forty-three last less than one minute). However, there is also a major work, a ‘tableau musical-psycologique' entitled Esclavage et liberté (Op.22). Other oddities: a cycle of seven pieces that lasts three minutes and a half ( Une fête , Op.38) and one out of four pieces written without accidentals, on white keys only ( Chansons blanches , Op.48). While Rebikov and Lyapunov died shortly after the establishment of the Soviet regime, Reinhold Glière lived all through the period of Stalinism, outliving the dictator himself by three years. As a composer he remained a traditionalist Romantic, and he didn't reject the opportunity to celebrate a few feasts of the new regime with his music. Also Glière wrote short pieces for piano, mainly in Chopin's tradition but as well in that Russian piano music style of the day, led by the influence of Scriabin. A wonderful pianist, Arensky's and Taneyev's pupil, he reached his creative peak in the 25 Preludes Op.30 ( twenty-five as he adds to the series – which follows Bach's, not Chopin's harmonic order – one last Prelude in C major, just as Alkan did): an impressive, extremely varied and interesting series. The spirit of Chopin, inherited through his Polish mother, marks Glière's short Mazurka (Op.29), and the eloquent simplicity of the Esquisses Op.47 betrays educational, but mostly appropriate, intentions. As for his discography, Anthony Goldstone is an interpreter we can't overlook. The repertoire he presents is not just special and precious, but also put forward with remarkable cultural intelligence: each one of his CDs can be said to develop a theme. This knowledge of the various repertoires also enables him to move with extreme versatility from genre to genre, from composer to composer, from character to character: from the sentimentalism, a little frivolous, of some of Arensky's pieces, to the irony of work by Rebikov; from Lyapunov's Russian-style harmonies to the cyclical integrity of Glière's Preludes , everything performed through the vaguely archaic sound of a Grotrian piano, Goldstone convinces and charms us. CLASSICALNET (joint review with dda25083 and 25084): Rebikov was an excellent teacher and performer with his output including various chamber and orchestral works as well as several stage works. However his greatest legacy remains his varied and assorted collection of piano pieces which finds a good selection here. Apparently his later work includes some rather dissonant pieces which caused him to fall out of favour but the pieces recorded here remind one of such luminaries of his time such as Vaughan Williams, Scriabin, Rachmaninoff and Mompou. Gliere who was of Belgian descent was also a dab hand on the piano as the 25 Preludes demonstrate with fantastic amounts of colour and quite amazing virtuosic demands. The same goes for the Mazurkas and also the Esquisses which have that tinge of oriental colour which we find in his orchestral works with the ballet "Red Poppy" and the massive 3 rd Symphony, "Ilya Murometz" coming to mind. Finally there's the disc dedicated to Sergey Lyapunov who is also a master of the miniature but who composed a Piano Sonata which is unjustifiably rather neglected nowadays. I greatly enjoyed his Variations on a Georgian Theme as well as the moving "Fêtes de Noël", a lovingly created miniature for the Christmas period. After listening to these performances for the best part of four hours, I have to say that I was bowled over by Anthony Goldstone's consummate artistry and sheer virtuosity in these multi faceted pieces. Like the Shostakovich volume, these three discs are a must acquisition for those who know and love things Russian. Fastidiously detailed notes and fine recordings complement what must be one of the highlights of piano recordings this year. MUSICWEB: MIDWEST RECORD: CLASSICAL POINTERS: Innovative in his time and an early proponent of the whole-tone scale, the all but forgotten music of Vladimir Rebikov (1866-1920) foreshadowed composers like Debussy, Scriabin, Stravinsky, Copland and Villa-Lobos. His tiny experimental pieces tackle a variety of problems; the Chansons blanches, on white keys only, anticipate Constant Lambert's 30 years on. This survey has 42 little pieces in 50 minutes, outdoing in their brevity Webern's to come, plus one of Rebikov's few extended Lisztian Tableaux musical-psychologiques, a continuous stream-of-consciousness 20 minutes single movement. Anthony Goldstone's comprehensive notes draw you into this unique composer's world, and he plays all the music with a winning flair, recorded close by his home in the village church at Alkborough, Lincolnshire. Warmly recommended, and lots of worthwhile pieces to consider for piano teachers (who just might know The Christmas Tree ) [Scores available free on line] NEW CLASSICS: The second volume of his Russian Piano Music Series features works by Vladimir Rebikov, who was born in Siberia in 1866 and died in 1920. In addition to many piano works Rebikov wrote numerous orchestral, vocal and stage pieces, including ‘musico-psycholographic dramas' in some of which he experimented by combining spoken and sung text to a musical accompaniment. He wrote in a bewildering array of styles and was admired by other composers, including Janácek, Debussy and Grieg, but despite his considerable achievements - he has been called ‘the father of Russian modernism' - Rebikov has been driven to the margins of musical history. This is borne out by the fact that, as far as can be determined, out of this recital programme only a piece of two minutes' duration has previously been recorded. Anthony Goldstone's formidable playing is technically superb and articulate, revealing all the passion and colour in this little heard music. PIANIST (joint review of 25081, 25083, 25084, 25085): OZARTS REVIEW: Most of the pieces here are short, ranging from durations as brief as 23 seconds to two or three minutes. There's one larger scale offering: Esclavage et liberte which runs for just under twenty minutes. As a schoolboy growing up many years ago in Cape Town and an enthusiastic competitor in local eisteddfodau, I often played set pieces by Ladoukhin, Maykapar, Karganov, Goedicke, Rebikov – and numbers of so-called Fairy Tales by Medtner. Nearly all of these, as I recall, were published by Chester . Their level of difficulty approximated some of the trickier pieces in Schumann's Album for the Young. They were handy to play at piano teachers' end-of-term concerts and at school prize giving ceremonies. Very few of these miniatures are available on CD which is a shame as these morceaux deserve an occasional airing – and this recording of music of Rebikov is a welcome addition to the recorded repertoire, not least because, according to the liner notes, of the 43 tracks, one – and one only – has previously been recorded. The soloist in this miniature was Shura Cherkassky who would offer it as an encore from time to time: the charming, lilting little Valse from The Christmas Tree suite. Rebikov, born in Siberia in 1866, died in warmer climes (Yalta in the Crimea) in 1920, leaving a great deal of music, much of it now being recorded by enterprising and adventurous pianists such as Anthony Goldstone.Rebikov wrote in a bewildering variety of styles; many are on offer here. Listen to The Devils Amuse Themselves and The Giant Dance. Both call for emphatic, foot-stamping heaviness. Goldstone presents these noisy little pieces with gusto. Bittersweet melancholy informs almost every moment of the six brief utterances that are collectively called Autumn Leaves. This is hardly great music but certainly worth an occasional airing. A liner note suggests that the very short items that together make up A Festival anticipate the ultra-brief pieces of Webern. As well, the opening Vivo eerily calls Stravinsky's Petrouchka to mind in its rhythmic treatment – and there's a gritty gaiety to the following miniature which Goldstone despatches with nimble, accurate fingers. Of the suite – Pictures for Children – it is The Music Lesson, in particular, that delights with its deliberate pedal blurring depicting a piano pupil very much under par And The Promenade of the Gnomes makes a graceful obeisance to Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition.
|