Alice Sara Ott: Nightfall
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Alice-Sara Ott, Erik Satie, Claude Debussy, Maurice Ravel
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Magazine Review Date: AW18
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 66
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 483 5187
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Rêverie |
Claude Debussy, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Claude Debussy, Composer |
Suite bergamasque |
Claude Debussy, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Claude Debussy, Composer |
Gaspard de la nuit |
Maurice Ravel, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Maurice Ravel, Composer |
Pavane pour une infante défunte |
Maurice Ravel, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Maurice Ravel, Composer |
(6) Gnossiennes, Movement: No. 1 (1890) |
Erik Satie, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Erik Satie, Composer |
(6) Gnossiennes, Movement: No. 3 (1890) |
Erik Satie, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Erik Satie, Composer |
(3) Gymnopédies, Movement: No. 1, Lent et douloureux |
Erik Satie, Composer
Alice-Sara Ott, Composer Erik Satie, Composer |
Author: Jed Distler
On the other hand, she underplays and tiptoes around ‘Clair de lune’, unlike Jean-Yves Thibaudet’s beautifully sung-out rendition (Decca, 7/00). Her ‘Passepied’ sounds relatively matter-of-fact and neutral when measured alongside Cho (again) and a faster, more interestingly inflected Alexis Weissenberg performance that’s also on DG (7/86). Ott’s slow and rhetorical Satie Gnossienne No 1 sounds unctuous and self-aware next to Alexandre Tharaud’s faster, more direct and comfortably idiomatic recording (Harmonia Mundi), although she treats the popular first Gymnopédie and the third Gnossienne simply and beautifully.
On to Ravel’s increasingly ubiquitous Gaspard de la nuit. For all of Ott’s attractive shadings and half tints in ‘Ondine’, other pianists bring more consistent clarity to the main chordal ostinato pattern (Aimard, Berezovsky and, of course, Michelangeli). She stretches ‘Le gibet’ out to a possibly record-breaking 9'20", as opposed to the normal five- to seven-minute range of motion. Amazingly enough, however, Ott’s carefully calibrated nuances and balances and hypnotic sense of long line prove gripping on their own terms. The repeated notes in the introduction to ‘Scarbo’ sound less foreboding and mysterious than mechanically hammered out, while the dotted rhythms are accurately executed yet lack the lightness, spring and propulsion one hears in the classic reference recordings of Pogorelich (DG, 6/83) and François (EMI/Warner). An elegant, intimately scaled Ravel Pavane closes a recital that largely goes in one ear and out the other, save for Ott’s extraordinary, not-to-be-missed slow-motion ‘Le gibet’.
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