  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
                
              
 alternatively 
CD: 
AmazonUK
AmazonUS
 
		    | 
           
             
			 Now Would All Freudians Please Stand Aside 
 CD 1
 Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
 Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major, BWV564 (1710) arr. Ferruccio BUSONI (1866-1924) [19:38]
 Partita No.6 in E minor, BWV830 (c.1726) [30:51]
 Concerto No.3 in D minor – adagio, BWV974 after Alessandro MARCELLO (1689-1747) [4:54]
 Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1828)
 Piano Sonata No.30 in E major Op.109 [21:51]
 CD 2 
 Fryderyk CHOPIN (1810-1849)
 Prelude in E minor Op.28 No.4 [2:41]
 Etude in C minor Op.25 No.12 [2:40]
 Interviews with James Rhodes [16:06]
 Video – live at the Roundhouse performing the Bach/Marcello Adagio [5:07]
 
             
            James Rhodes (piano)
 
			rec. November 2009, Potton Hall. Video footage, 13 May 2009, live at the Roundhouse
 CD 2 is an enhanced CD for PC/Mac. Requires Quicktime 7 or later to view the video.
 
             
            ABC CLASSICS 476 4593   [77:09 + 21:17 + DVD 5:07]  
			 
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                 
                   
                  I would ignore the rock star title of this disc and hunker down 
                  with the music. Or, if you prefer, assimilate the title as part 
                  of James Rhodes’s life story, and still hunker down with the 
                  music. The performances reveal the inner man, and these performances 
                  are seldom less than impressive in their own way.  
                   
                  His Bach/Busoni Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major 
                  builds to its climax with inexorable logic, and considerable 
                  digital control. Rhodes’s appreciation and understanding of 
                  Bach is a constant as is his, I suspect, more selective reverence 
                  for Beethoven, whose music he also plays with genuine insights, 
                  sometimes taken to a personalised degree, or length. This is 
                  the case in Op.109, where expression is correlated to time spent. 
                  But the cumulative weight does build, once again, and this time 
                  to the special revelation of the disturbingly intense end to 
                  the sonata’s first movement. His Prestissimo second movement 
                  is vitalising and excellent, and if I find parts of the finale 
                  a touch italicised, just a little point-making in places, his 
                  articulation remains outstanding.  
                   
                  Unhyphenated Bach comes in the shape of the Sixth Partita, in 
                  E minor. Once more the approach is rapt, personal, articulate 
                  and convincing in breadth. He takes the Sarabande at 
                  a daringly slow tempo, and this a noticeable feature of all 
                  the performances of the suites and partitas that I have heard 
                  him give – the need to give time and horizontal space to such 
                  slow movements. The quicker ones are not necessarily correspondingly 
                  quicker, as if to compensate, but unfold at their own natural 
                  pace, albeit still subject to occasional quirks of emphasis 
                  or rhythm or articulation. He finishes the first disc with a 
                  warmly textured Bach/Marcello Adagio, although he can’t 
                  shake my allegiance to Earl Wild here.  
                   
                  The second disc is short, only 27 minutes. There are only two 
                  works, both by Chopin and both adeptly performed, but they only 
                  occupy five or so minutes. The remainder is taken up by interviews 
                  with Rhodes, in which he talks and occasionally plays to illustrate 
                  a point. The disc cover carries a Warning – described as ‘Moderate 
                  impact course language and/or themes.’ That must be like The 
                  Art of Course Fishing, then. Fans of fonts, misspellings 
                  and associated matters might like to note that the qualifier 
                  ‘moderate’ is in capitals and bold font which paradoxically 
                  makes it seem as if it’s worse than a couple of F words. Rhodes 
                  is disarmingly sincere – full of humility and humanity. This 
                  disc also has a brief video component - a performance of the 
                  Bach/Marcello live at the Roundhouse, which requires Quicktime 
                  7 or later to view.  
                   
                  Rhodes’ own biography makes for compelling reading but it’s 
                  his musicianship, partly informed by those vicissitudes, that 
                  makes him so interesting a musician.  
                   
                  Jonathan Woolf   
                   
                
                             
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |