FIRE & WATER
JI LIU, Piano
Classic FM D56 / ****1/2
Take a seat, Lang Lang and Li Yundi, as
the latest Chinese piano sensation is Liu Ji, or Ji Liu as he is known in London
where he is based. His fourth album on the Classic FM label (distributed by
Decca) has two of the five Chinese elements as the theme: fire and water.
The usual suspects of musical
impressionism are here, represented by Debussy’s Reflections on The Water
(from Images Book 1), the preludes The Engulfed Cathedral and Fireworks,
and Ravel’s Jeux D’Eau (Fountains) and Une Barque Sur L’Ocean
(A Boat In The Sea), where he is at his fluid and incandescent best. To
serve populist tastes, there is Ludovico Einaudi’s Le Onde (The Waves),
Manuel de Falla’s Ritual Fire Dance and Ode To The Yellow River
from the infamous Yellow River Concerto.
The last was a transcription by Liu
himself, as are two movements from Saint-Saens’ Carnival Of The Animals
(Aquarium and The Swan) and Rachmaninov’s song Floods Of
Spring, which sound very idiomatic. Guido Agosti transcription of three
movements from Stravinsky’s The Firebird is the big virtuoso work that
is guaranteed to bring down the house.
Alexander Scriabin’s Second Sonata
(or Sonata-Fantasy) in G sharp minor seems like a curious choice.
However its two diametrically contrasted movements sound like a vivid musical
portrayal of water and fire respectively, even if the Russian had not intended
it so. The yin and yang of piano music has seldom been better illuminated in
these scintillating performances.
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