Berkeley, L & M Piano Works
Lennox Berkeley’s fine piano music gets the performances it so richly deserves
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Michael Berkeley
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 12/2004
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 74
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHAN10247
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(6) Preludes |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
(3) Pieces |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Paysage |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Scherzo |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Sonata for Piano |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
(3) Mazurkas |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Improvisation on a Theme of Manuel de Falla |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Concert Study |
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer
Lennox (Randall Francis) Berkeley, Composer Margaret Fingerhut, Piano |
Strange Meeting |
Michael Berkeley, Composer
Margaret Fingerhut, Piano Michael Berkeley, Composer |
Author: Peter Dickinson
This is another landmark in the Chandos Berkeley Edition but, even more, it offers some of the finest piano music by any British composer. Lennox Berkeley was absolutely at one with the piano, his own instrument, and his keyboard solos, duets and concertos are at the summit of his achievement.
Many young pianists have tackled the Six Preludes (two rather hard to play) and there are two other recordings of the Sonata (1945) which Malcolm Williamson justifiably called ‘an absolutely faultless, stupefying masterpiece with not a bad note in it’. Both earlier recordings are sympathetic but Margaret Fingerhut has greater authority and is better recorded. She brings a wonderfully rapt pianissimo to the spiritual slow movement of the Sonata; effortlessly glittering passagework in the scherzo textures; and no exaggeration in rubato.
I have known these pieces for more than 50 years and can confirm that every move she makes is utterly musical and idiomatic. The melodies are allowed to speak for themselves in the great pianistic tradition stretching from Mozart to Ravel. Nobody else could have written this richly rewarding music and these performances confirm Fingerhut as an outstanding executant.
Michael is represented by a single early work from the 1970s based on the Wilfred Owen poem, familiar from his godfather Britten’s War Requiem. It’s atmospheric and imaginatively conveyed here. The piano sound is bright in forte, perfect in pianissimo and the ambience suits the music.
Many young pianists have tackled the Six Preludes (two rather hard to play) and there are two other recordings of the Sonata (1945) which Malcolm Williamson justifiably called ‘an absolutely faultless, stupefying masterpiece with not a bad note in it’. Both earlier recordings are sympathetic but Margaret Fingerhut has greater authority and is better recorded. She brings a wonderfully rapt pianissimo to the spiritual slow movement of the Sonata; effortlessly glittering passagework in the scherzo textures; and no exaggeration in rubato.
I have known these pieces for more than 50 years and can confirm that every move she makes is utterly musical and idiomatic. The melodies are allowed to speak for themselves in the great pianistic tradition stretching from Mozart to Ravel. Nobody else could have written this richly rewarding music and these performances confirm Fingerhut as an outstanding executant.
Michael is represented by a single early work from the 1970s based on the Wilfred Owen poem, familiar from his godfather Britten’s War Requiem. It’s atmospheric and imaginatively conveyed here. The piano sound is bright in forte, perfect in pianissimo and the ambience suits the music.
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