Sep 8th 2019

Well worth a detour: this fresh reading  of Chopin’s two piano concertos

by Michael Johnson

Michael Johnson is a music critic with particular interest in piano. 

Johnson worked as a reporter and editor in New York, Moscow, Paris and London over his journalism career. He covered European technology for Business Week for five years, and served nine years as chief editor of International Management magazine and was chief editor of the French technology weekly 01 Informatique. He also spent four years as Moscow correspondent of The Associated Press. He is the author of five books.

Michael Johnson is based in Bordeaux. Besides English and French he is also fluent in Russian.

You can order Michael Johnson's most recent book, a bilingual book, French and English, with drawings by Johnson:

“Portraitures and caricatures:  Conductors, Pianist, Composers”

 here.

 

Chopin’s two piano concertos are among the most frequently recorded of 19th century works, both for their melodic charm, their pulsing rhythms and their historical significance. Young Chopin wrote the piano part with exceptional verve, showing the way for future composers to let the piano burst free from its orchestral surroundings.

Many of the great pianists have grappled with these great pieces, often not quite settling down with the conductor and orchestra. Harshest criticism has rejected Ivo Pogorelich’s 2003 version and Artur Rubenstein doesn’t fare much better, trying to outplay the New Symphony Orchestra of London.

Some consensus has emerged for outstanding performances by Maria Joäo Pires (1992) with André Previn’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, and Martha Argerich’s 1998 recording with Charles Dutoit and the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal (OSM).

Now comes a new entry what deserves a detour – the underestimated Canadian pianist Charles Richard-Hamelin (no relation to fellow Canadian Marc-André Hamelin) and the highly praised Kent Nagano conducting the OSM.

Richard-Hamelin has a reasonable profile in Canada and somewhat lesser name in France but in the international piano world he struggles to be recognized despite his many decorations. He was silver medalist in the 2015 Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw, after all.

MJ_Kent_Nagano
Kent Nagano by the author Michael Johnson 

 

I for one was eager to hear him under the exacting leadership of Nagano, music director of the Montréal orchestra. Their new CD under the Analektra label is riveting, especially the memorably performed Larghetto of the No. 1.  Music historians have long speculated that this movement, named a “Romance” by Chopin, it is a ten-minute love song to his close association with Konstancja Gladkowska. 

And it set new standards for letting the pianist express himself. As Alan Walker writes in his new biography Fryderyk Chopin: A Life and Times, “Nothing prepares us for the kaleidoscopic range of color that emerges from the keyboard as the Romance unfolds…” Walker asserts that there was no precedent anywhere in the known works for piano and orchestra.

Nagano and Richard-Hamelin exceed themselves in producing what Chopin was striving for, a feeling of  “calm and melancholy, giving the impression of someone looking gently toward a spot which calls to mind a thousand happy memories. It is a kind of reverie in the moonlight of a beautiful spring evening.”

Richard-Hamelin seems at ease with the musical and technical challenges of both these concertos, the virtuoso turns, the sensitive emotions and the dialogue with Nagano’s players. He and Nagano are tightly synchronized. 

Just 30 years old, Richard-Hamelin produced his first solo recording only four years ago and has since recorded three other CDs featuring works by Beethoven, Chopin and George Enescu.

I once asked Nagano how he manages to produce such clarity from his section players. He said it is simple. “We take it a measure at a time, we try variations until it sounds perfect, then we put it all together.” He has earned his reputation as a tough taskmaster.

 

END

 


This article is brought to you by the author who owns the copyright to the text.

Should you want to support the author’s creative work you can use the PayPal “Donate” button below.

Your donation is a transaction between you and the author. The proceeds go directly to the author’s PayPal account in full less PayPal’s commission.

Facts & Arts neither receives information about you, nor of your donation, nor does Facts & Arts receive a commission.

Facts & Arts does not pay the author, nor takes paid by the author, for the posting of the author's material on Facts & Arts. Facts & Arts finances its operations by selling advertising space.

 

 

Browse articles by author

More Music Reviews

Sep 25th 2014

Think of your favourite piece of music. Do you get shivers when the music swells or the chorus kicks in? Or are the opening few bars enough to make you feel tingly?

Despite having no obvious survival value, listening to music can be a highly rewarding activity.

Aug 18th 2014

Pianist Mordecai Shehori’s prodigious output of CDs over the past few years must be setting some kind of record. Almost every piece of the piano repertoire he has studied throughout his long career is being preserved for posterity, now amounting to 31 CDs.

Aug 14th 2014

The past may be a foreign country, but in terms of war, they do not do things differently there; death is death at any time and in any language.

No other work in the Classical repertoire could be more topical or appropriate in commemorating the centenary of the Great War than Benjamin Brit

Jul 19th 2014

An interview by Ivan Ilic. 

Jul 17th 2014

Chinese pianist Ernest So’s eclectic tastes set him apart from the current run of young Asian keyboard superstars now filling concert halls around the world. He has the technical brilliance of the best of them but more importantly he is a discerning student of the repertoire.

Jul 13th 2014

Gregg Lehrman is a composer and entrepreneur who has helped score music for a number of big TV shows and films.

Jun 9th 2014

The Bach suites for solo cello can leave you suffused, body and soul, with their plangent resonances if you allow them to. These six intimate pieces seem conceived to exploit the sensual nature of the cello.

Jun 5th 2014

When British music lecturer Julia Winterson offered composer John Cage a cup of coffee, he just looked at her. Ms. Winterson, recalling the 1989 encounter, said she thought maybe he hadn’t heard her or didn’t understand her Yorkshire accent.

Jun 1st 2014

A new CD from Ivan Ilic, the Serbian-American pianist based in France, offers a most refreshing change of pace from the current crop of young keyboard speedsters and clavier hammerers.

May 25th 2014

Frederic Rzewski's The People United Will Never be Defeated is one of those pieces that seems to have popped or plopped out whole and near perfect.

May 23rd 2014

With a selection of three rarely recorded piano pieces, the great neglected American composer Frederic Rzewski surges back into view this spring on a new CD from the Naxos “American Classics” series.  Where has he been these past few years?

May 21st 2014

Robert Beaser is one of our very strongest composers.

May 19th 2014

John Adams is one of the most frequently performed of American composers and justly so.

May 16th 2014
As an arts snob, I had never paid much attention to Irish traditional music but here, in a new CD called “Sleepsongs” (Heresy 014, U.S. distribution by Naxos), the lovely Irish singer Caitriona O’Leary’s calming voice overwhelms from the first track onward.
May 13th 2014

Of the perhaps inappropriately named New York School, I find Earle Brown's the most musically rich and articulate. Sign Sounds is for a small chamber orchestra.

May 9th 2014

My friend Stephen Albert once said that he couldn't imagine writing a string quartet after those of Bartok.

Apr 18th 2014

The $10,000 Music Pulitzer Prize went this year to Alaskan composer John Luther Adams, launching a heated debate in the music world over who was – or wasn’t – most deserving of this perpetually controversial award.

Apr 15th 2014

Contrary to many keyboard artists, pianist William Grant Naboré seems perfectly at home with Beethoven’s daunting Diabelli Variations.

Mar 11th 2014
The expatriate young pianist Mauro Bertoli, now artist in residence at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, brings his feathery Italian touch to a new CD, Italian Memories, featuring his personal collection of little-known Italian keyboard works.

His timeline stretches

Mar 3rd 2014

Every few years, music lovers should try to attend a live performance of Olivier Messiaen’s Turangalila Symphonie. Not just to clean one’s pipes but to be reminded what a composer’s volcanic imagination can do with an orchestra.