ANTONIOU Complete Piano Works
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Theodore Antoniou
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Grand Piano
Magazine Review Date: 07/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 79
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: GP779
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Entrata |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Aquarelles |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Piano Sonata |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Syllables |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Prelude and Toccata |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Inventions and Fugue |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Inventions, Prelude and Fugue |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
7 Rhythmic Dances |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Synaphes |
Theodore Antoniou, Composer
Konstantinos Destounis, Piano Theodore Antoniou, Composer |
Author: Jed Distler
In his booklet notes, Destounis succinctly states how Antoniou ‘integrates Greek traditional elements within a wide range of post-war musical styles, always approached in an intuitive, personal way’. What is more, Antoniou’s confident and exuberant piano-writing and protean inventive powers consistently hold interest.
The opening work, Entrata (1983), comprises Antoniou’s largest single-movement piano work. It’s a rhapsodic yet judiciously paced procession of massively resonating cluster chords, threnodies on the piano strings, free-floating single-line melodies supported by slow-moving bass ostinatos in fifths and rapid-fire virtuoso flourishes going up and down the keyboard. Many of these gestures return in a more concentrated and forceful guise throughout the shorter Synaphes (2001). By contrast, the 10 brief pieces encompassing Aquarelle (1958) might be considered to be freewheeling updates of Bartók’s more advanced Mikrokosmos.
So might the 1959 Sonata’s four brief movements, especially the Adagio’s intriguing dialogue between detached left-hand octaves and sustained right-hand chords. The Op 4 pieces follow similar lines, yet are relatively dry in content.
However, the extended inside-the-piano techniques and wide dynamic palette characterising the six short Syllables (1965) wander into Luciano Berio territory while still going their own way, and unpredictable rhythmic detours keep you guessing in the Prelude and Toccata (1982). Antoniou’s Seven Rhythmic Dances (2000) remain within traditional tonal bounds yet are full of delightful canonic asymmetry, and doesn’t No 6’s main theme sound like the Rondo from Beethoven’s Pathétique Sonata on a bender?
Destounis’s ardent, vivid and colourful pianism only enhances my positive response to Antoniou’s music, together with the composer’s justifiably enthusiastic endorsement.
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