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             Xavier MONTSALVATGE 
              (1912-2002)  
              Piano Music 3: Music for two Pianos  
              Barcelona Blues (1956/1961) [5:16]  Calidoscopio (1990) 
              [13:13]  Homenatge (1998) [1:58]  Tres Divertimentos sobre 
              Temas de Autores Olvidados (1941/1983) [6:36] 
              Sum Vermis, for soprano, two pianos and two percussionists 
              (1973) [15:24] + 
              Cinco Invocaciones al Crucificado, for voice, piano, celesta, 
              harp, three flutes, double bass and five percussionists (1969) [20:31] 
              * 
                
              Jordi Masó (piano) 
              Miquel Villalba (piano II, *celesta)  
              Pia Freund (soprano); +Ferran Carceller (percussion); +Miquel Àngel 
              Martínez (percussion); *Ensemble Barcelona 216/*+Ernest Martínez 
              Izquierdo  
              rec. Auditori de Barcelona, Spain, 13-17 July 2011. DDD  
                
              NAXOS SPANISH CLASSICS 8.572636 [63:14]  
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                  Perhaps surprisingly for those to whom his name is still unfamiliar, 
                  Catalan composer Xavier Montsalvatge is fairly well represented 
                  on CD, with five recordings available, for example, of the Concierto 
                  Breve and more still of the Sonatine pour Yvette. 
                  The recently-founded Xavier Montsalvatge society 
                  provides a huge, comprehensive discography.  
                     
                  This is the third volume in Naxos's survey of the piano music, 
                  all performed by Jordi Masó (previous volumes on 8.570744 
                  and 8.570756). There is assistance from others as required - 
                  the Granollers Chamber Orchestra on the first two discs, and 
                  here by various musicians and ensembles, since these recordings 
                  are by no means a simple 'music for two pianos' the front cover 
                  advertises.  
                     
                  Montsalvatge's music is nothing if not eclectic, ranging across 
                  a number of styles, particularly neo-classicism and impressionism. 
                  Many of his works also draw on serialism and polytonality, and 
                  in later years he was seen as part of the European avant-garde. 
                  All these ingredients pop up in various arrangements on this 
                  CD. However, things begin sensibly at the more approachable 
                  end with the very Gershwinesque Barcelona Blues, one 
                  of Montsalvatge's most popular works. In the short Homenatge 
                  ('Homage'), written for Alicia de Larrocha to play at a tribute 
                  concert in honour of the great soprano María de los Ángeles, 
                  Montsalvatge quotes freely from the Catalan folksong El Cant 
                  dels Ocells, which she and Pau Casals between them made 
                  famous. The punchy Three Divertimentos bring some exotic 
                  flavour into the mix - rhythms and melodies from Scotland and 
                  Cuba.  
                     
                  Variety is the keynote of Calidoscopio too, in which 
                  Montsalvatge delivers a dazzling array of styles promised in 
                  the title, yet all still in a highly accessible idiom. He even 
                  quotes his own Barcelona Blues. Jordi Masó and 
                  Miquel Villalba give suitably laid-back but technically poised 
                  accounts of these works.  
                     
                  On the whole, melody is seldom far away in Montsalvatge's music 
                  and an attractive Spanish/Catalan - or more accurately, Latino 
                  - colour is splashed across much of it. In the final two works, 
                  though, there is some indication of what endeared Montsalvatge 
                  to modernists. Arguably, Sum Vermis and the Five Invocations 
                  are out of place on a CD of piano music - vocal works are not 
                  usually included in such anthologies. At any rate, Sum Vermis 
                  ('I am (a) Worm') is a stark, gloomy work that revels in the 
                  ‘miserabilism’ of the Catalan poem by Jacint Verdaguer 
                  it brings to life. It seems rather perverse, however, for Naxos 
                  to have asked Pia Freund to perform this work. As good as her 
                  voice is, she is Finnish rather than Catalan, and her training 
                  in the language seems rather basic. Some Catalan sequences prove 
                  too difficult for her, and clarity of enunciation suffers at 
                  times. Unfortunately, the multilingual texts of the Cinco 
                  Invocaciones are even more demanding of a polyglot ability. 
                  Freund makes a valiant attempt, but she is always the foreigner 
                  with the slight accent.  
                     
                  Be that as it may, neither of these is a piano work by any stretch, 
                  but they are recorded rarities and for anyone with an 
                  ear sympathetic to late Stravinsky or Orff, likely to prove 
                  memorable, especially given the impressive instrumental performances 
                  on offer here.  
                     
                  Sound quality is very good, warm and intimate. Jordi Masó's 
                  booklet notes are detailed and well written/translated. The 
                  sung texts are all included in the booklet except the middle 
                  of the five Incantations, which for some reason is omitted. 
                   
                   
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk  
                     
                   
                 
                   
                 
             
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