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            Sergei PROKOFIEV 
              (1891-1953)  
              Piano Sonata No.2, Op.14 [18:08]  
              Visions Fugitives, Op.22: No.1 [1:14]; No.3 [0:55]; No.4 [0:54]; 
              No.7 [1:52]; No.10 [0:46]; No.6 [0:35]; No.11 [1:07]; No.17 [1:14]; 
              No.5 [0:34]  
              Ten Pieces from Romeo and Juliet, op.75: No.4 Juliet as a young 
              girl [3:32]; No.6 Montagues and Capulets [3:26]; No.8 Mercutio [2:16]; 
              No.10 Romeo and Juliet before parting [7:06]  
              Piano Sonata No.7 in B flat, Op.83 [17:34]  
                
              Sergei Dukachev (piano)  
              rec. live: August 28, 2005, Whiteley Hall, Chetham’s School of Music, 
              Manchester, UK (Sonata 2); January 26, 2000 (Visions Fugitives) 
              & July 18, 2001 (Sonata 7), The Picture Gallery, Royal Holloway, 
              University of London, UK; February 16, 2002, The Maidment Building 
              Auditorium, The Music School, Shrewsbury, UK (Romeo and Juliet). 
               
              All tracks previously released on the Dunelm label  
              Russian Piano Music Volume 7  
                
              DIVINE ART DDA25096 [61:42]   
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                It seems appropriate that Prokofiev wrote some of his finest 
                  and most varied music for his own instrument, the piano. Prokofiev 
                  left a handful of recordings of his own playing for posterity, 
                  setting a high standard for those wanting to follow in his footsteps 
                  and tackle this remarkable oeuvre. That bar was maintained by 
                  two of Prokofiev’s pianist colleagues, Emil Gilels and Sviatoslav 
                  Richter, so that anyone attempting this repertoire is stepping 
                  into a mighty tradition. This volume continues Divine Art’s 
                  survey of an even grander tradition: the hi-ways and by-ways 
                  of Russian piano music.  
                   
                  Divine Art’s Prokofiev compilation begins with the Second Piano 
                  Sonata of 1912, the most substantial among the first five. It’s 
                  a case of serving the best first in Dukachev’s case, as this 
                  performance is the most secure on the disc with only the final 
                  Vivace suffering from a few blemishes. The Andante 
                  is successful, with Dukachev building the tension effectively 
                  throughout.  
                   
                  Only a few notes into his selection from the Visions Fugitives, 
                  however, and alarm bells ring. Dukachev misses a chord in the 
                  left hand of No.1, leading to a bar or so of mismatched left 
                  and right hands. It sounds so deliberate that I questioned my 
                  own edition of the score, but checking the original Russian 
                  print confirms that it must be a mistake on Dukachev’s part. 
                  It turns out that these are live recordings, taken from a number 
                  of different concerts; not that you’d know from the back of 
                  the box. So, a memory slip could be forgiven - it’s certainly 
                  happened to the very best in the past – but who is going to 
                  want to listen to this mistake again and again?  
                   
                  Armed with the knowledge that these are live recordings - only 
                  confirmed inside the booklet - the lack of audience noise throughout 
                  - save for the end of the 7th Sonata, which includes applause 
                  - is a relief. The disc’s live status goes some way to explain 
                  Dukachev’s untidy finger-work in the faster passages of the 
                  Op.22 selections. All pianists make mistakes in concert, but 
                  these performances aren’t persuasive enough in their own terms 
                  to warrant anyone returning to them and hearing those mistakes 
                  again.  
                   
                  Four of Prokofiev’s Ten Pieces from Romeo and Juliet 
                  suffer from the same issues, though they confirm that Dukachev 
                  is at least good at dreamy atmosphere, such as that conjured 
                  for the beginning of Romeo and Juliet before parting. 
                  The Seventh Sonata, one of Prokofiev’s fiercest works in any 
                  genre, is given a reasonable performance which impresses mostly 
                  in the shell-shocked second movement Andante coloroso, 
                  but the Precipitato finale is disappointingly underpowered. 
                   
                   
                  Across the entire disc, there is the added problem of poor sound, 
                  which varies quite noticeably between pieces but which is always 
                  consistently bad. It would have been poor by the standards of 
                  four decades ago; the fact that all of these recordings were 
                  taped during or after 2000 makes the situation particularly 
                  unforgivable. I’m inclined to give Dukachev the benefit of the 
                  doubt in some cases of muddy playing, as the acoustic and production 
                  can only have made the problems worse than they might have seemed 
                  at the time of the performances. But the sound problems are 
                  enough on their own for me to direct anyone interested in sampling 
                  Prokofiev’s wonderful piano music elsewhere, such as to Bernd 
                  Glemser’s three budget priced discs of Prokofiev’s complete 
                  piano sonatas (including the Romeo and Juliet pieces) 
                  on Naxos (8.553021; 8.554270; 8.555030), at the very least. 
                   
                   
                  Andrew Morris  
                  Follow Andrew’s string music blog at http://devilstrillblog.blogspot.com/ 
                   
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                  
                  
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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