In addition to their big box of the A-Z 
                  of Pianists,which was an impressive document and afforded 
                  real biographical bite, Naxos has long been active in the field 
                  of the restoration of piano recordings. Some, such as their 
                  Moiseiwitsch 
                  and Cortot 
                  series, seem to develop semi-bewildering sub-titles as they 
                  develop. Others are more in the way of one-offs. Currently they 
                  are investigating Gilels and Michelangeli, amongst others. Here 
                  they turn back the clock to recordings made between 1901 and 
                  1924. There is a kind of binary function at play here - broadly 
                  the ‘Chopin-Schumann axis and the Liszt/Leschetizky group’ 
                  as Naxos describe it. 
                    
                  Thus we have a disparate group of composer-pianists, followed 
                  by specialists, some of whom composed - and some, like Lamond, 
                  on wide canvasses. Saint-Saëns was a finger technician 
                  of the utmost clarity and brilliance. The verve and dynamism 
                  of his playing is spellbinding and scintillating. Naxos has 
                  opted for the 1919 recordings in preference to the discs he 
                  made in the very first years of the century. Nevertheless despite 
                  his increasing age there’s no let-up in the brilliance 
                  of his articulation. Grieg’s May 1903 recordings were 
                  waxed on a single day and are all of his own music.  Subtlety 
                  and clarity inform his playing which is strongly characterised, 
                  digitally pretty well immaculate and of tremendous strength. 
                  Though he had not long to live, these sides attest to his still 
                  powerful technique and an unsentimental command .He was known 
                  for his dislike of showy rubati and he demonstrates how well 
                  he practised what he wrote. We hear two of the nine sides he 
                  left. Chaminade is, as ever, free and lovely, seemingly unperturbed 
                  by the studio. I was especially glad to see that d’Indy 
                  and Granados have been included. One hears more of the latter’s 
                  piano rolls, perhaps, these days but his disc recordings offer 
                  immeasurably the more authentic experience and attest to the 
                  marvellously evocative playing of his own music - as well as 
                  Scarlatti-Granados Sonata; all three sides recorded in Barcelona 
                  c.1912. D’Indy is even less encountered in transfers which 
                  makes his brace (London, 1923) the more important. Again, he 
                  plays his own music as one would expect. The cachet is cemented 
                  by good sound form the Hayes studios.  
                  
                  Eibenschütz’s records are some of the most vital 
                  and important committed to disc. Born in 1873 she studied with 
                  Clara Schumann and left behind these few, precious traces of 
                  her performing style before marriage took her away pretty much 
                  permanently from the concert hall and recording studio, albeit 
                  she did makes some duo and chamber appearances. The Brahms sides 
                  are the most important of her recordings in view of her association 
                  with the composer. He showed her the then unpublished Opp.118 
                  and 119. Her playing of the (abridged) G minor Ballade Op.118 
                  No.3 thus reverberates with this knowledge; it’s a very 
                  rare recording indeed and intensely important, allowing one 
                  intimate access to a performance from the immediate Brahms circle. 
                  
                    
                  Alfred Grünfeld was a perennial favourite on 78, though 
                  his recordings don’t have a markedly high cachet today. 
                  His Viennese G&Ts have a frothy charm in the Strauss. Single 
                  recordings have been accorded to the remaining pianists. Marie 
                  Baumayer’s c.1910 disc for Union must be relatively uncommon. 
                  Aleksander Michałowski’s superb playing is represented 
                  by his 1905 Warsaw Chopin Waltz in C sharp minor. This transfer 
                  is greatly to be preferred to that on APR 5531 [The Piano G&Ts 
                  Volume 1] preserving far more colour and timbral variety even 
                  if the noise suppression of the APR promises initially to offer 
                  a smoother aural ride. There’s not so much in the Janotha 
                  [APR 5532; Piano G&Ts Volume 2], but the Naxos is a shade 
                  brighter. Lamond’s Liszt has been anthologised often enough, 
                  Friedheim’s Emerson is always worth hearing, and Koczalski 
                  is suitably heroic in his c.1924 outing.  
                  
                  Other companies have also ploughed the same or similar soil, 
                  as we have seen. Marston has its Legendary Piano Records (see 
                  review) 
                  with a selection of the recordings of Grieg, Massenet, Debussy, 
                  Saint-Saëns, Louis Diémer and Raoul Pugno. APR has 
                  an extensive series of Piano G&Ts, Symposium is more focused. 
                  The Saint-Saëns and Griegs are also on Marston 52054-2 
                  as well as APR 5533, the Chaminade is on APR 5533, the two Eibenschütz 
                  are on APR5534, the Michałowski on APR5531, the Janotha 
                  (as noted above) on APR5532, the Sapelnikoff on Pearl GEMM CD9163. 
                  
                    
                  In pretty much all respects Naxos’s transfers (Ward Marston 
                  and Richard Warren Jr) are the field leaders, except when Marston’s 
                  own are involved, when there’s a dead heat! 
                    
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                Track & performer details
                  Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921) 
                  Suite algérienne, Op. 60 (excerpts) (arr. for piano) 
                  
                  IV. Marche militaire francaise [3:38] 
                  III. Reverie du soir a Blidah [3:45] 
                  Camille Saint-Saëns (piano) 
                  Vincent D’INDY (1851-1931) 
                  Tableaux de voyage, Op. 33 IV. Lac vert [3:02] 
                  Poeme des montagnes, Op. 15 II. Danses rythmiques [3:46] 
                  Vincent d'Indy (piano) 
                  Cécile CHAMINADE (1857-1944) 
                  La Lisonjera (The Flatterer), Op. 50 [2:46] 
                  Cécile Chaminade (piano) 
                  Edvard GRIEG (1843-1907) 
                  3 Pictures from life in the country, Op. 19: No. 2. Bridal Procession 
                  [3:00] 
                  Lyric Pieces, Book 5, Op. 54: No. 2. Gangar (Peasant's March) 
                  [2:01] 
                  Edvard Grieg (piano) 
                  Enrique GRANADOS (1867-1916) 
                  Danzas espanolas, Op. 37, DLR I:2: No. 10. Danza triste [3:08] 
                  
                  Improvisation on El pelele, goyesca [3:02] 
                  Piano Sonata No. 9 in G minor, DLR VI:1.9 (arr. of Scarlatti 
                  Keyboard Sonata, K.190/L.250/P.256) [2:02] 
                  Enrique Granados (piano) 
                  Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897) 
                  16 Waltzes, Op. 39: No. 2 in E major - No. 15 in A flat major 
                  [2:11] 
                  6 Piano Pieces, Op. 118: No. 3. Ballade in G minor (abridged) 
                  [2:42] 
                  Ilona Eibenschutz (piano) 
                  Johann STRAUSS (1825-1899) 
                  Frühlingsstimmen (Voices of Spring), Op. 410 (arr. A. Grunfeld) 
                  [3:59] 
                  Soiree de Vienne - Concert Paraphrase from Strauss' Waltzes 
                  from Die Fledermaus and others, Op. 56 [5:36] 
                  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791) 
                  Symphony No. 39 in E flat major, K. 543: III. Menuetto (arr. 
                  J. Schulhoff for piano) [2:59] 
                  Alfred Grünfeld (piano) 
                  Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856) 
                  Studien fur den Pedal - Flugel (Studies for Pedal Piano), Op. 
                  56: No. 4 in A flat major [4:06] 
                  Marie Baumayer (piano) 
                  Fryderyk CHOPIN (1810-1849) 
                  Fugue in A minor [2:20] 
                  Natalia Janotha (piano) 
                  Waltz No. 7 in C sharp minor, Op. 64, No. 2 [3:15] 
                  Aleksander Michałowski (piano) 
                  Polonaise No. 6 in A flat major, Op. 53, "Heroic" [6:03] 
                  Raoul Koczalski (piano) 
                  Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
                  2 Morceaux, Op. 10: No. 2. Humoresque in E minor [2:32] 
                  Vassily Sapellnikov (piano) 
                  John BLOW (1649-1708) John BULL (c.1562-1628) 
                  William BYRD (1539-1623) 
                  Lord Salisbury's Pavane - Fugue in C major - The King's Hunting 
                  Jygge [4:04] 
                  Mark Hambourg (piano) 
                  Edvard GRIEG (1843-1907) 
                  Lyric Pieces, Book 10, Op. 71: No. 3. Puck [2:09] 
                  Arthur de Greef (piano) 
                  Franz LISZT (1811-1886) 
                  2 Concert Etudes, S145/R6: No. 2. Gnomenreigen [3:16] 
                  Frederic Lamond (piano) 
                  Hungarian Rhapsodies, S244/R106: No. 2 in C sharp minor (abridged) 
                  [4:25] 
                  Arthur Friedheim (piano)