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            Giuseppe MARTUCCI 
              (1856-1909) 
              Piano Concerto no.1 in D minor, op.40 (1878)* [34:20] 
              La canzone dei ricordi (1887, orch.1899)** [33:33] 
                
              Gesualdo Coggi (piano)*, Silvia Pasini (mezzo)** 
              Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma/Francesco La Vecchia 
              rec. 16-18 October 2007, 17-20 January 2008, 2-3 March 2008, Auditorium 
              Conciliazione-Orchestra Sinfonica di Roma Studios 
              Italian text (**) included, English translation can be downloaded 
              from Naxos site 
                
              NAXOS 8.570931 [67:53] 
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                Martucci’s First Piano Concerto came as a revelation to me. 
                  And yet, it should not have, since this was not the first time 
                  I’d heard the piece. As performed here, it unfolds with a leisurely 
                  ease, a perfect child of Italian pre-D’Annunzio decadence. An 
                  expression of the world of the “scapigliati” painters Ranzoni 
                  and Cremona, the world of the aristocratic villas still visible 
                  here and there, particularly on the northern lakes, the “little 
                  old world” celebrated in a cycle of novels by Fogazzaro, the 
                  major Italian 19th century novelist after Manzoni. 
                  A world of decadence whose bright-eyed innocence had not yet 
                  been perverted by the egotistic obsessions of D’Annunzio, a 
                  world where “the tall plants … proffered as ever, swaying and 
                  murmuring in the wind, the poem of shadows and of life, peace 
                  and the sweet imaginings of love” (Fogazzaro: Daniele Cortis). 
                    
                  In technical terms, this is created by an orchestral and pianistic 
                  attack that is full and rounded in fortes, never brittle, by 
                  gently caressing the pianos and by allowing the lyrical lines 
                  to blossom in a fulsome yet tender way. What emerges is an unusually 
                  proportioned concerto, its two outer movements with dramatic 
                  leanings that are only a backdrop to more intimate confidences 
                  and, conversely, a gentle slow movement that is a framework 
                  to a more mercurial central section. All this works, I should 
                  add, because the conductor and the truly excellent pianist interpret 
                  the piece as with one mind. 
                    
                  Recordings of Martucci concertos come and – more often – go. 
                  My own knowledge of this one was based on an off-the-air performance 
                  by Pietro Spada and the Milan RAI SO under Francesco Mander. 
                  The little-remembered Mander did good work in Trieste and here, 
                  perhaps following the Toscanini mould – this is a historical 
                  recording I haven’t heard – has a leaner sound, tersely dramatic, 
                  though still allowing the lyrical lines to sing. This performance 
                  is about three minutes shorter than the Naxos one. I was amazed 
                  that the same music could sound so different, yet equally convincing. 
                  However, this is a piano concerto - piano concertos have pianists 
                  and here it’s Pietro Spada. Spada is an excellent musicologist 
                  and, ironically, it is his edition of the concerto that Coggi 
                  and La Vecchia are using. On record, Spada was notable for a 
                  complete cycle of Clementi’s piano music, and he plays everything 
                  with a brittle clarity and a metronomic rigidity that does few 
                  favours even to Gradus ad Parnassum. His perfunctory 
                  dismissal of Martucci’s yearning lyricism would be comic except 
                  that it’s not really funny to travesty beautiful music. 
                    
                  However, I’m inclined to think that, even if Mander had collaborated 
                  with a pianist worthy of the occasion, a more dramatic approach, 
                  albeit finely brought off, would have the disadvantage that 
                  the listener might reflect that there’s a Piano Concerto no.1 
                  in D minor by Brahms that does all this and better. As interpreted 
                  by Coggi and La Vecchia, the music finds its niche, inhabiting 
                  an expressive zone not touched by other concertos, if not other 
                  Italian ones from the same period. 
                    
                  The Song of Memories is possibly Martucci’s best-known 
                  work, a little ironically given that his principal aim was to 
                  establish an Italian repertory of purely instrumental music. 
                  With words by the decadent Neapolitan poet Pagliara it can stand 
                  as a musical epitome of an Italian artistic movement mainly 
                  bypassed by that country’s operatic history. 
                    
                  I was not entirely convinced by the mezzo-soprano chosen for 
                  La Vecchia’s recording of Casella’s Notte di Maggio 
                  and, having seen some negative comments by British critics, 
                  I was prepared to have similar reservations over Silvia Pasini. 
                  Far from it, so perhaps I should start by looking at the type 
                  of vocal response called for. 
                    
                  This cycle was originally written for mezzo-soprano and piano, 
                  but performances more often use a soprano. This is because the 
                  writing goes fairly high, requiring the sort of soaring ease 
                  which only a mezzo of the Giulietta Simionato type, one well 
                  able to sing Santuzza, could bring off. Clearly, we are talking 
                  of a fully operatic style of delivery, and here is the paradox 
                  of Italian 19th century song. The composers often 
                  write piano accompaniments modelled on the lieder of Schumann 
                  or Brahms – as Martucci initially did in this case – while yet 
                  expecting the singer to provide an Italianate line, with all 
                  that entails. 
                    
                  One thing it entails is that Italian vocal teaching expects 
                  the voice to vibrate naturally – I don’t say automatically and 
                  unthinkingly – as an expressive device. When the generally restrained 
                  first piece occasionally soars up to blossoming high notes, 
                  Pasini releases the operatic throb, providing a frisson that 
                  a more tightly controlled delivery would have lacked. As proof 
                  that she is fully in control of what she is doing, hear how 
                  she opens the second song, “Cantava’l ruscello”, with an almost 
                  childlike clarity and practically no vibrato. She uses such 
                  means to differentiate, in the next song, between those parts 
                  of the text in italics and those that are not. The penultimate 
                  song contains, starting from “O dolce notte”, one of the most 
                  glorious lyrical effusions in Italian song, and Pasini matches 
                  it with lusciously soaring lines. At the other extreme, the 
                  regretful, intimate last song is a model of vocal control, capping 
                  a performance that I would describe as masterly, even great. 
                    
                  Here too, I had an RAI performance for comparison, by Elena 
                  Rizzieri with the Naples Scarlatti orchestra under Nino Sanzogno. 
                  This performance, too, shaves three or four minutes off the 
                  Naxos one. However, since Sanzogno was conducting for a light 
                  soprano, noted for her Mozart and sounding rather soubrettish 
                  in this music, it’s difficult to say whether his tempi were 
                  dictated by the vocal material at hand. In any case, while I 
                  feel that La Vecchia sometimes loses out by comparison with 
                  “historical” practitioners like Sanzogno, Rossi or Caracciolo 
                  in Malipiero or Casella, Martucci is a different matter. The 
                  composer had been dead since 1909, his music practically dormant. 
                  When I came to Italy in 1975, if you mentioned the names of 
                  Martucci or Sgambati to any self-respecting, with-it young Italian 
                  musician, his face was immediately covered by that same look 
                  of withering scorn that mention of Parry or Stanford evoked 
                  among young musicians in Great Britain in those years. So there 
                  was no surviving Martucci tradition, the specific value of the 
                  music and its meaning for today’s world has to be rediscovered. 
                  This, it seems to me, La Vecchia has done here. If I’ve had 
                  doubts over his Malipiero and Casella, on this showing he was 
                  born to conduct Martucci. 
                    
                  As is the Naxos practice in its Italian series, separate notes 
                  are provided in Italian. In the case of Malipiero and Casella, 
                  both David Gallagher and Marta Marullo had their own particular 
                  insights, an added value if you can read both languages. Here, 
                  Marta Marullo’s essay is considerably more detailed than Richard 
                  Whitehouse’s note, which, while acceptable, might have been 
                  usefully replaced by a translation of the Italian commentary. 
                  No marks for the off-the-shelf modern-traditional art specimen 
                  on the cover, unattributed. So many paintings by Ranzoni, Cremona, 
                  Mosè Bianchi, and De Nittis would have set the mood better. 
                    
                  Christopher Howell 
                   
                  see also review by Stephen 
                  Vasta 
                            
                 
                
         
                  
                 
                 
                 
             
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