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            Marc-André 
              HAMELIN (b. 1961)  
              12 Études in all the minor keys (1986-2009) [50:20]  
              Little Nocturne (2007) [2:15]  
              Con intimissimo sentimento (excerpts) (1986-2000)  
              I. Ländler I [2:21]  
              II. Album Leaf [2:12]  
              III. Music Box [2:00]  
              IV. After Pergolesi [3:49]  
              V. Berceuse (in tempore belli) [2:34]  
              Theme and Variations (Cathy’s Variations) (2007) 
              [10:37]  
                
              Marc-André Hamelin (piano)  
              rec. 8-10 November 2009, Concert Hall, Wyastone Estate, Monmouth, 
              UK; 25-26 January 1998, EMI Abbey Road Studio No 1, London; 15 May 
              2009, St George’s, Brandon Hill, Bristol; and 30 August 2008, 
              Henry Wood Hall, London  
                
              HYPERION CDA67789 [76:10]   
              Sound 
              Samples  
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                  Dante’s imprecation ‘Abandon all hope ye who enter 
                  here’ seems appropriate for this music; not so much a 
                  case of pain and penury as a warning to those foolish enough 
                  to attempt it. Written and played by the Quebec-born virtuoso 
                  Marc-André Hamelin, these pieces continue the tradition 
                  of composer-pianists - Liszt especially - skilled enough to 
                  play their own devilish creations. As keyboard wizards go, Hamelin 
                  is one of the very best; his Alkan is simply astonishing (see 
                  review) 
                  so there’s no doubt he has the technique, but such exercises 
                  can seem relentless if they lack emotional/expressive range. 
                  Happily, Hamelin acknowledges this in his detailed liner-notes, 
                  where he describes his études as ‘character pieces’ 
                  rather than mere pianistic puffery.  
                     
                  Composed over 25 years, these pieces mimic a wide range of styles. 
                  The Triple Étude (after Chopin) is a good indication 
                  of what’s to come, outward urbanity concealing a powerfully 
                  individual undertow. It’s a compelling blend of virtuosity 
                  and feeling, for which Hyperion provides a warm, natural piano 
                  sound. The second étude, subtitled Coma Berenices, 
                  is more of a showpiece, the third, After Paganini-Liszt, 
                  a witty little exercise in staccato and dragging dance rhythms. 
                  This has all the glitter and gasp one associates with its flamboyant 
                  forebears, but what really appeals here is the pianist’s 
                  abiding sense of fun.  
                     
                  It’s seriously good playing, and the fourth étude, 
                  loosely titled ‘more of the same’, is a millrace 
                  in sound, strong rhythms in the left hand driving the music 
                  forward. It really does evoke the breathless brio of 
                  Alkan’s work, but then it is based on a contrapuntal combination 
                  of two of his pieces. The fifth étude, a ‘grotesque 
                  toccata’, must be one of the most challenging thus far, 
                  but again there’s enough personality in the playing to 
                  make it more than a sterile study. Very different from the fine, 
                  filigreed writing of No. 6, a deftly executed homage to Scarlatti. 
                   
                     
                  And that’s another plus in this collection; the individual 
                  études are arranged to offer maximum contrast in terms 
                  of mood and manner, which makes it remarkably easy to sit through 
                  all 12 pieces in one sitting. The seventh étude, for 
                  example, is different again; subtitled After Tchaikovsky, 
                  you’d be hard-pressed to realise it’s for the left 
                  hand only. There’s a profound sense of calm beneath those 
                  lovely flourishes and quiet bass figures. Indeed, this is a 
                  pearl of a piece, perfectly formed and beautifully polished. 
                  An excellent example of Hamelin’s skills as composer and 
                  pianist, and a piece I will return to with great pleasure.  
                     
                  The eighth étude, Erlkönig, is a direct response 
                  to Goethe’s original poem and not the Schubert song, although 
                  the menacing bass at the start does hint at the mounting alarm 
                  that underpins the latter. Generally, Hamelin’s score 
                  is not as overtly dramatic as Schubert’s, nor does it 
                  have that compelling musical and emotional arch; still, it has 
                  a simplicity - an artlessness, if you like - that is most welcome 
                  after the highly wrought pieces we’ve heard thus far. 
                  As for the ninth and tenth études - subtitled After 
                  Rossini and After Chopin - these have already been 
                  released on Hyperion CDA67050. One certainly wouldn’t 
                  suspect they were recorded earlier, as they are as pleasingly 
                  presented as the rest. The Rossinian rush of notes is very well 
                  articulated, Chopin’s sound world admirably distilled 
                  in the all-to-brief No. 10.  
                     
                  The last two études, a minuet and prelude and fugue, 
                  seem to inhabit a very different universe, with grace supplanting 
                  glitter. That said, Hamelin’s straight-faced baroquerie 
                  is shot through with freer, more inventive writing, the stately 
                  dance all but forgotten until it reappears towards the end. 
                  Even that most formal of genres, the prelude and fugue, is filtered 
                  through a contemporary lens; the result is spikier and more 
                  extrovert than one might expect, the original tune glimpsed 
                  beneath coruscating embellishments. So, a rousing finale that 
                  only serves to increase one’s admiration for this most 
                  gifted composer-performer.  
                     
                  The remaining pieces on this disc are no less alluring, from 
                  the atmospheric, rather Debussian, Little Nocturne through 
                  to the five movements from Hamelin’s Con intimissimo 
                  sentimento. By his own admission, these are not as difficult 
                  as the études, but as miniatures they require a delicacy 
                  of touch and judicious attention to dynamics. Needless to say, 
                  Hamelin has all these qualities, the delicate Ländler 
                  I sensitively shaped, the gentle susurrations of Album 
                  Leaf - a title well-known in Romantic piano repertoire - 
                  suggested by the lightest of strokes. That same poise attends 
                  the tiny tunes of Music Box, whose oft- repeated pirouettes 
                  have a magnetic charm all of their own; the more expansive After 
                  Pergolesi demands a more robust approach, albeit with 
                  a subtlety of rhythm, the closing Berceuse curiously 
                  becalmed but never dull.  
                     
                  And that is another winning feature of this music - it never 
                  outstays its welcome. Hamelin has that all-too-rare ability 
                  to know when his material has been worked enough, so one is 
                  left feeling pleasantly sated. As for the Theme and Variations, 
                  its subtitle also has echoes of works dedicated to Cathys past 
                  and present. In this case the piece, written for Hamelin’s 
                  fiancée Cathy Fuller, has a simply stated theme and four 
                  fleeting - but very individual - sets of variations and a concluding 
                  Envoi. The pianist may be in a more relaxed mood, but 
                  he is just as scrupulous when it comes to rhythm, colour and 
                  general finesse.  
                     
                  In an age dominated by self-aggrandising performers it’s 
                  always a pleasure to hear artists who wear their virtuosity 
                  so lightly. There is much to savour, so many strands woven into 
                  works of skill and substance. Marry that with lucid, self-deprecating 
                  liner-notes and top-notch sound and you have one of the finest 
                  piano records of the year.  
                     
                  Dan Morgan    
                   
                 
                                                                                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                
               
             
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