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Audio CD
Composer
Liszt
Piece
Piano
Sonata in B minor; Vallee d'Obermann; Nuages gris; Isoldes Liebestod;
Präludium: Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen
Performer
Mathieu
Papadiamandis (piano)
Type
Instrumental
Details
EMI
Debut CDZ 5 74233 2
Performance
Sound
This is one
powerfully impressive pianist, and a powerfully serious one, too.
Liszt, on this scale, would hardly be Liszt without some dazzling
bravura, and the Sonata doesn't disappoint. But nowhere here is
there bravura for its own sake. In this work above all, Liszt's
integrity as a composer is absolute. So is Papadiamandis's as
a performer. Everything he does is directly in the service of
the music, though his technique easily transcends the most fearsome
challenges. What he gives us is what Liszt gives us: not an exercise
in razzmatazz but a symphony for piano. Nothing in Papadiamandis's
performance is more impressive than his powers of integration.
Despite its many cellular motifs, there are no true fragments
here, and nothing episodic in the playing. Its organic development,
its breadth of vision and its pianistic discipline set this apart
from many, maybe even most interpretations by pianists of Papadiamandis's
relative youth. He also has the gift of building up enormous waves
of sound without a hint of banging. Nor is he any less impressive
in the shorter pieces. Indeed, his playing of Isoldes Liebestod
ranks with the best I've heard. The layering of sound, the cumulative
risings and fallings of the big 'tune', if one can call it that,
the artful pacing and the epic reach, are exemplary at the very
least. This is a musician in the Brendel mode, who succeeds in
sounding uniquely his own man without the slightest recourse to
idiosyncrasy. In sheer intensity, Brendel may just have the edge,
his Lisztian psychology is perhaps more complex, but this is nevertheless
one of the most impressive debut discs to come my way in a long
time. Jeremy Siepmann
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