PRELUDES TO CHOPIN
KENNETH HAMILTON, Piano
Prima Facie 084 / ****1/2
Does the musical world need more
recordings of Frederic Chopin’s piano music? If your answer is “No”, then think
again, as the Cardiff-based Scottish pianist Kenneth Hamilton makes a persuasive
case of listening to Chopin differently, based on his research of historical
performances. Even his ordering of the pieces is unusual. Every major work is
prefaced by one Prelude. These short pieces, originally conceived to precede
longer pieces, can now be heard in context.
The nocturne-like Prélude in C
sharp minor Op.45, often played as a stand-alone piece, is heard before the “Funeral
March” Second Sonata (Op.35) in B flat minor. These two keys are
harmonically related, and the ear perceives the movements as almost seamless.
In the Funeral March proper, the inclusion of bass octaves makes it sound
doubly harrowing. His later inclusion of the stormy Prélude in E flat
minor (Op.28 No.14) is canny too, serving as a belated echo to the sonata’s
eerie finale, once described as “wind blowing over the graveyard”.
Finally, he performs
Franz Liszt’s own elaboration of Chopin’s Polish song Moya Pieszczotka (Mes
Joies or My Joys) as remembered by Liszt student Bernhard
Stevenhagen on a piano roll. This is Chopin heard through new ears indeed.
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