Pianist Martha Argerich in fiery form and Clare Hammond plays piano studies

CLASSICAL
MARTHA ARGERICH & FRIENDS LIVE FROM LUGANO 2014

Warner Classics 0825646134601 (3 Cds)
5/5 stars

The one defining feature of the Lugano Festival's Martha Argerich Project besides the legendary Argentine pianist's infectious musicianship is the sheer wealth of programming diversity on display, combining the familiar with the arcane. Her appearance in Mozart's popular Piano Concerto No. 20 with the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana conducted by Jacek Kaspszyk finds her in typically fiery form, revelling in the music's sturm und drang (storm and stress).

There are two piano quintets offered, a sassy arrangement of Milhaud's jazz ballet La Creation Du Monde (Creation Of The Earth) and Borodin's lovely but rarely heard Piano Quintet. An absolute rarity is Busoni's transcription of Mendelssohn's Mozart-influenced First Symphony for two pianos and eight hands shared by Akane Sakai, Lilya Zilberstein, as well as Anton and Daniel Gerzenberg, who rip into the work with relish.

Cello fanciers will enjoy the sonatas by Frank Bridge and Francis Poulenc, performed by Gautier Capucon with pianists Gabriela Montero and Francesco Piemontesi, respectively. Argerich's favourite chamber music partners, the veterans Mischa Maisky and Gidon Kremer, also make cameos in Beethoven's Bei Mannern Variations from Mozart's The Magic Flute and in Polish-Russian composer Miecyslaw Weinberg's Violin Sonata No. 5. These sparkling live performances capture the true collegial spirit of chamber music.


20TH CENTURY CLASSICS
ETUDE

Clare Hammond, Piano BIS 2004
4.5/5 stars

This album may have alternatively been named Future Of The Etude as it follows the piano study from its humbler origins as mere finger exercises well into the 21st century. It was Chopin and Liszt in the early- to mid-19th century who transformed the etude into an aesthetically pleasing art form. The Russian Sergei Lyapunov was clearly inspired by Liszt to write his own 12 Transcendental Etudes (1900), of which three - Terek, Nuit D'Ete and Tempete - have been chosen for their variety of expressive devices. Here, the prodigious pianism of Liszt is united with the Russian nationalism of Balakirev and Borodin.

The 12 Studies Op. 33 (1916) of Pole Karol Szymanowski are barely one-minute long each, but they are filled with light and colour, which take on the hues of Debussy's impressionism. The Korean Unsuk Chin was a student of the Hungarian Gyorgy Ligeti and her Six Etudes (1995-2003) pay tribute to his own Etudes, wondrous essays of rhythmic and textural complexity which are modernistic, dissonant yet totally engaging.

Finally, the Ukrainian Nikolai Kapustin's 5 Etudes In Different Intervals Op. 68 (1992) employ the blues, jazz harmonies and syncopations in service of entertaining finger-twisters. The young British pianist Clare Hammond's readings of divergent styles are a revelation and make a welcome entry into an overpopulated world of recorded pianophilia.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 22, 2015, with the headline Pianist Martha Argerich in fiery form and Clare Hammond plays piano studies. Subscribe