Mar 11th 2014

Italian flavor with a difference

by Michael Johnson

Michael Johnson is a music critic with particular interest in piano. 

Johnson worked as a reporter and editor in New York, Moscow, Paris and London over his journalism career. He covered European technology for Business Week for five years, and served nine years as chief editor of International Management magazine and was chief editor of the French technology weekly 01 Informatique. He also spent four years as Moscow correspondent of The Associated Press. He is the author of five books.

Michael Johnson is based in Bordeaux. Besides English and French he is also fluent in Russian.

You can order Michael Johnson's most recent book, a bilingual book, French and English, with drawings by Johnson:

“Portraitures and caricatures:  Conductors, Pianist, Composers”

 here.

The expatriate young pianist Mauro Bertoli, now artist in residence at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, brings his feathery Italian touch to a new CD, Italian Memories, featuring his personal collection of little-known Italian keyboard works.

His timeline stretches from the largely forgotten Benedetto Marcello (a contemporary of Vivaldi) to Clementi and Martucci and on to Ferrucio Busoni who died in 1924. The range of style is equally wide. 

Bertoli, a frequent recitalist in Europe, Asia and North and South America, explains in his program notes that he assembled his Italian pieces from his life at the piano – some from his youngest years, others unearthed more recently. The CD “pays homage to my country of origin” and is “very close to my heart as it focuses on Italian music”.

I have been listening to this charming collection off and on for a week, and always perk up at Pietro Domenico Paradisi’s Toccata in A, an excerpt from one of his 12 keyboard sonatas. Paradisi’s work has languished in the repertoire but this Toccata survives as a better-known miniature perfectly suited to Bertoli’s delicate attentions. Reminiscent of Mendelssohn’s later Spinning Song, it stands out in this disc for its pleasant musicality.

Bertoli renders Clementi’s Sonata Opus 26 cleanly and confidently before turning to Giuseppe Martucci’s Romanza and Melodia. Martucci, who died in 1909, was a prolific orchestral composer who is enjoying a small revival today. But the bulk of his work was for the piano. These gems are representative of his compositional mastery. Bertoli brings a dreamy, song-like quality to both these pastoral works. 

But of all the pieces in this unusual disc, it is Ferruccio Busoni’s Diario Indiano (in English, Indian Diary) that makes the greatest impression, if only for its origins. Busoni was a modernist before his time and encouraged the use of all sound in music. He worked briefly in the United States during the First World War and became familiar with tribal music from American Indians.

Busoni student Natalia Curtis, originally a concert pianist, devoted her best years to collecting the unwritten melodies of the Hopi, Cheyenne and other tribes as an exercise in American identity. She collaborated with Busoni to bring some of this legacy to a wider public. Besides the Diary, Busoni produced the orchestral work Indian Fantasies, based on other discoveries salvaged by Curtis.

Busoni took the Indian rhythms and melodies, applied his personal harmonics, and produced a somewhat lonely, eerie landscape evocative of Indian spirituality and the prairie on which the tribes lived at the turn of the 20th century. Bertoli combines with Busoni to make these pieces a fresh blend of Italy and Native America – unique and a welcome addition to the repertoire. 

Bertoli goes to some lengths in his program notes to thank the more than 75 contributors, his “musical investors”, who financed this personal journey through Italian music. The recordings were produced in Italy near his birthplace in Brescia.



Related:

Young Italian pianist at ease with Scarlatti

Published 24.03.2013
The young Italian pianist Mauro Bertoli, now based in Ottawa, Canada, displays considerable hubris in leading off his recent solo CD with three well-known Scarlatti sonatas. If he felt he had something to say that Horowitz and Pogorelich hadn’t..




  

 


This article is brought to you by the author who owns the copyright to the text.

Should you want to support the author’s creative work you can use the PayPal “Donate” button below.

Your donation is a transaction between you and the author. The proceeds go directly to the author’s PayPal account in full less PayPal’s commission.

Facts & Arts neither receives information about you, nor of your donation, nor does Facts & Arts receive a commission.

Facts & Arts does not pay the author, nor takes paid by the author, for the posting of the author's material on Facts & Arts. Facts & Arts finances its operations by selling advertising space.

 

 

Browse articles by author

More Music Reviews

Feb 23rd 2014

Pierre Boulez’s brainchild from 1976, the renowned Ensemble Intercontemporain, is on the road again with a combination program of standards and some striking new sounds from the world of new music. Audiences are responding with rapture.

Jan 11th 2014
When Katia and Marielle Labèque, the French piano duo, brought their New York minimalist avant-garde show to Bordeaux recently (Jan. 10) I was afraid for them.
Jan 7th 2014

You would have to be quite a sure-footed composer to believe you could improve on something as perfect as the harpsichord sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti.

Dec 30th 2013

Nothing clears the mind of overplayed Christmas season tunes – popularly known as earworms -- like an hour in the company of Keeril Makan’s music. His new CD, Afterglow, is as refreshing as a glass of cold Chablis.

Dec 23rd 2013

Dame Evelyn Glennie works wonders with her mallets, hammers and her bare hands in a new CD of John Corigliano’s percussion concerto – a piece that he initially hesitated to undertake for fear that it couldn’t be done. At least not to his exacting standards.

Dec 8th 2013

Alexander Tcherepnin’s piano music, just completed on last of four CDs, reflects his lifelong span of variegated composition, including his earliest creations at 15 years of age while on the run with his family from Russian revolutionaries. 

Dec 4th 2013

French composer Charles-Valentin Alkan, a member of the Liszt-Chopin circle and one of the most respected piano virtuosos of his day, is back with us after decades of neglect.  The occasion for his return is the 200th anniversary of his birth, and two striking CDs o

Nov 30th 2013

The intensity of the relationship between Johannes Brahms and Clara Schumann has intrigued music historians for 150 years and now conductor/pianist John Axelrod has tackled the liaison with a new double CD set (Brahms Beloved, Telarc) linking them in words and music.

Nov 18th 2013

Nothing excites music lovers more than the discovery of a previously unknown composition by a dead master.  Such stories are even better if the score has been unearthed from detritus in some isolated farmhouse almost ready for the torch.

Oct 30th 2013

“Light and Shadow” at New England Conservatory’s Jordan Hall Saturday night was sponsored by the Foundation for Chinese Performing Arts, a worthy non-profit organization devoted mainly to boosting young Chinese musicians and artists.

Oct 21st 2013

The Korean-born, American-trained pianist Soyeon Kate Lee is developing rapidly as a seasoned performer with personal charm and musical intelligence, both of which were on display Sunday in a challenging program at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Oct 1st 2013

Traditional classical music finally wore out its welcome with me a few years ago by endless repetition of the Top Twenty pieces on FM radio.

Sep 14th 2013

Renowned Japanese percussionist Kuniko Kato makes stunning music from the simplest of instruments, stretching their sonorities to heights never previously heard on record.

Sep 6th 2013

The Van Cliburn International Piano Competition ended with the results many observers had predicted, the gold medal going to a self-assured Vadym Kholodenko, 26, of Ukraine.

Sep 1st 2013

I recently became a “chance music” composer by accident – the best way. John Cage would have approved.

Jul 21st 2013

The late American composer Morton Feldman, an influential underground figure who was spurned by mainstream musicians in his lifetime, is enjoying a welcome, if belated, renaissance in the US and Europe.

Jul 19th 2013

Except for the lucky few who have the gift, students struggling to coax music out of a piano are in for a world of pain.

Jul 14th 2013

A young man from provincial Italy brought style back to the recent Van Cliburn Piano Competition with unbridled displays of joy at the keyboard and a mature artist’s mastery of the music.

Jul 3rd 2013

Alessandro Deljavan, the promising young Italian pianist who emerged as a major contender at the recent Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, has decided to pull out of the Cleveland International Piano Competition just a month before it opens July 3O.

Jun 16th 2013

Young pianists who decide to go into major international competitions will need much more than musicianship from now on.