SCHUBERT; CHOPIN; FAURÉ Impromptus
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Fryderyk Chopin, Franz Schubert, Gabriel Fauré
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Klanglogo
Magazine Review Date: 02/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 70
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: KL1511
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
4 Impromptus |
Franz Schubert, Composer
Franz Schubert, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
Fantaisie-impromptu |
Fryderyk Chopin, Composer
Fryderyk Chopin, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
(3) Impromptus |
Fryderyk Chopin, Composer
Fryderyk Chopin, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
(5) Impromptus, Movement: No. 1 in E flat, Op. 25 (1881) |
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Gabriel Fauré, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
(5) Impromptus, Movement: No. 2 in F minor, Op. 31 (1883) |
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Gabriel Fauré, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
(5) Impromptus, Movement: No. 3 in A flat, Op. 34 (1883) |
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Gabriel Fauré, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
(5) Impromptus, Movement: No. 4 in D flat, Op. 91 (1905-06) |
Gabriel Fauré, Composer
Gabriel Fauré, Composer Tomasz Lis, Piano |
Author: Jed Distler
Similar expressive conceits in Chopin’s Fantaisie-Impromptu come off better on account of Lis’s more translucent textures. His lithe and winged A flat Impromptu outer sections bracket a heavily dragging Trio. While the F sharp Impromptu can stand unusually slow readings (Arrau, for example), Lis’s enervated phrasing and tensionless central march die on the proverbial vine. But the G flat major, although similarly soft-grained, conveys sufficient poetic impulse.
Lis blends the Fauré First Impromptu’s gnarly figurations into Schumannesque blocks while stretching out the second theme to a fault; put on Jean-Philippe Collard’s brighter, clearer performance and the fresh air returns. He fares much better with No 2’s scampering quasi-tarantella main theme but returns to earnest, square-toed form for a straitjacketed No 3 that is far removed from Paul Crossley parsing the right-hand melodies so that they move over the bar-lines. While Collard graces No 4’s elusive harmonic sleights of hand with rhetorical insights and sophisticated rubato, Lis’s literal, ironclad, bass-heavy traversal sounds comparably Teutonic. The booklet-notes gush about the pianist and production team’s painstaking search for a perfect recording venue, and, indeed, the former East Berlin radio station they discovered may well be an acoustic gem. That still doesn’t prevent the piano sonority from becoming timbrally strident and diffuse in loud passages.
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