Enescu’s Second Piano Suite was written in 1903 and
consists of four movements. Given Enescu’s love of J. S. Bach’s music it is
unsurprising that he followed the Baroque model of a dance sequence – a majestic
Toccata, a noble Sarabande, a slow Pavane and a lively Bourrée.
Even though it is missing the opening Toccata and is
captured in less-than-ideal sound, fans of Dinu Lipatti may still want to track
town this historic recording of the suite. Lipatti’s compatriot, Aurora Ienei,
recorded the suite in 1981 for the Romanian Electrecord label (it was licenced
to the Olympia label and second-hand copies can be occasionally tracked down.
Although Ienei’s touch is sure, the boxy acoustic does little to enhance her
piano’s sound. Luiza Borac’s 2003 recording for Avie was hailed as
ground-breaking at the time and followed extensive research into the autograph
scores of Enescu’s piano oeuvre. This led to many errors in the printed
versions being corrected; the recording very much continues to stand the test
of time. Matei Varga turned in a more than creditable recording for Naxos.
Christopher Falzone’s recording for the Sisyphe label rather flew under the
radar and is intent on sounding more like Bach than anything else. Heard
alongside the best of these alternatives (Borac and Varga), Krichel’s recording
sounds somewhat cool and detached, even though it is technically very well
played indeed.
Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition might be the
more famous of the two works on this release, for many that might be a draw. The
work might be better known in orchestral incarnations – most often Ravel’s –
but the piano original is worthy of exploration. Mikhail Pletnev (Virgin
Classics) gets to the heart of the work with insightful characterisation of the
Promenade across its several incarnations. Krichel’s performance,
although interesting, finds less variety in this connective tissue that runs
through the work. Where Krichel does score though is in a few of the individual
tableaux that form the exhibition. The missing element, though, is the same one
missing from his Enescu: feeling for the music. With that there might be more
palpable weight and Russianness in his overall conception.
The slender two minute Nocturne from Borodin’s Petite
suite provides an addendum that rounds out the recording in a pleasant
manner.
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