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From:
Deryk Barker <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 24 Jul 2000 10:51:39 -0700
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          Hamelin plays Godowsky
  The Complete Studies on Chopin's Etudes

   * Godowsky: 54 Studies on Chopin's Etudes

Marc-Andre Hamelin, piano
Hyperion CDA67411/2 (2 CDs) [DDD] (153:02)

Those of us who enjoy older recordings, originally on 78s, are well aware
that ultimate fidelity to the text was not always considered a necessary
attribute of great playing.  Many pianists from the "Golden Age" were
particularly fond of "improving" Chopin by, for example, playing tricky
passages in thirds (Josef Hoffman's 1930s recording of the "Minute" Waltz
is a good example).

Few, however, went anything like as far as Leopold Godowsky (1870-1938)
whose 53 Studies on the Etudes of Chopin have received a fair amount of bad
press over the years, mainly through a misunderstanding (possibly wilful)
of Godowsky's intentions.

Godowsky was not attempting to improve Chopin's Etudes, but to use them as
the basis for creating over fifty monumentally difficult studies, designed
to serve the same purpose: to help improve technique, but to do it with
musically worthwhile material.

Richard Wagner described Chopin as "a composer for the right hand" and
Godowsky would probably have agreed with him.  Which is doubtless the
reason why no fewer than 22 of them are for the left hand alone - including
the transcription of the famous Revolutionary Etude.  (This was the first
significant body of left-hand piano music and Ravel studied it extensively
while composing his Concerto).

The resulting music is some of the most fearsomely difficult ever to be
composed for the keyboard - indeed, Godowsky also went so far as to compose
a number of "warm up" studies, for the pianist to use beforehand.

More importantly, though, Godowsky did not just produce "parlour tricks" or
"prettified" version of Chopin, but used his Etudes as a starting-point for
some truly remarkable music.

Many of the studies are fairly straight transcriptions, particularly the
left hand ones, but most of them either add extra subjects in counterpoint,
transpose the function of the hands in the original - as in the first of
all, a majestic reworking of Op.10 No.1 with the right hand arpeggios given
to the left hand - or emphasise rhythmic features in subtle or
not-so-subtle fashion.

Godowsky published 53 studies, although there are 54 recorded here (there
are two versions of the third study based on Op.25 No.2).  Obviously
a number of the originals feature more than once (and one, Op.25 No.7
doesn't appear at all), but Godowsky really let himself go with the famous
Butterfly Etude, Op.10 No.5, which inspired no few than seven studies,
including, of course, a left hand version.

Op.10 No.5 also features in possibly the most remarkable of all the
studies, No.47, "Badinage", which combines it with the other G flat Etude,
Op.25 No.9 (the Black Key) in a tour-de-force both compositionally and
technically.

Marc-Andre Hamelin has recorded several of the studies before (on a CBC
Musica Viva disc) but this new complete recording supersedes that rather
murkily-recorded disc in every way.

Hamelin is, of course, one of the very few living pianists with the
technique to play this music as it should be played: fluently, so that the
listener is scarcely aware of the hideous demands imposed on the performer.

Not only does Hamelin have the "chops" he has been including various of the
studies in his recitals (both programmed and as encores) for years now and
it shows.

I suppose this music is not for everybody; there will undoubtedly be those
whose first, second and indeed last reaction will be "sacrilege!".  So be
it.

A simple experiment, though, will suffice: listen to to Hamelin's
performances of the first two studies (both based on Op.10 No.1): the
titanic first and the delicate, filigree-like second.  If you are
indifferent (or worse, offended), then this music is not for you.

But for anyone who can break out of the "purist" mentality, this set
contains some simply magnificent pianism and reveals Godowsky's studies
to be worthy of performance in their own right as wonderful music.

This is the third complete set to appear on record.  Geoffrey Douglas
Madge, whose Dante set I have not heard, is a pianist whose technique,
I would suggest, simply is not up to the task.  Certainly on the basis of
his dismal Busoni set recorded for Philips some 15 years ago, I would avoid
him.  Assuming you can find it that is: I don't recall ever even seeing
his recording.

Carlo Grante's set on Altarus (what I've heard of it) is very good, and
perhaps slightly better recorded than Hamelin's, but comes on three rather
than two discs, and is also harder to find.  Nor does Grante seem to have
quite the same facility with the music; true, there is no sense that he is
struggling, but he still doesn't sound sufficiently at ease to add much
interpretively.  Or perhaps he recorded them too soon.

Hamelin's may not be the only way to play these studies but, until a
pianist with a similarly transcendental technique and equal musicianship
records them - and that, I'd suggest, could be some considerable time -
this is without doubt the set to have.

Deryk Barker.
<[log in to unmask]>
Copyright Deryk Barker, 2000.

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