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			Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
     Klavierstücke No.1 and 2, D946 [14:31 + 11:52]
     ‘Ländler Suite’
     16 Ländler; Nos. 1-5, 10, 13, D366 [4:31]
     12 Ländler; Nos. 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11, D790 [4:55]
     12 German Dances, Nos 1, 3, 4, D420 [2:14]
     16 Ländler; No.1, D366 [0:43]
     3 Lieder transcribed by Franz Liszt
     Ständchen [5:25]
     Der Müller und der Bach [4:28]
     Ave Maria [5:02]
     Piano Sonata in B flat, D960 (1828) [40:19]
     Cyprien KATSARIS (b.1951)
     Spontaneous Improvisation on themes by Tchaikovsky and Wagner [5:23]
     Alessandro MARCELLO (1699-1747)
     Adagio from Oboe Concerto in D minor Op.1, transcribed by Johann
Sebastian Bach and arranged by Cyprien Katsaris [4:48]
 
             
            Cyprien Katsaris (piano)
 
			rec. 3 July 1993, live at Schubertiade Festival, Konservatorium
Feldkirch, Austria
 
                
              PIANO 21 P21 042-A   [57:51 + 55:36]  
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                  Unlike some Katsaris discs on his own Piano 21 label that I 
                  have seen or reviewed, this one comes from a single recital 
                  given at the Schubertiade Festival, held at the Konservatorium 
                  Feldkirch, on 3 July 1993. Naturally the vast bulk of the concert 
                  was given over to the music of that composer.  
                     
                  The programme is a typically eclectic one, mixing a major sonata 
                  with a series of Ländler and transcriptions. He begins 
                  with the two D946 Klavierstücke, which are dispatched 
                  with grace and perception and a genuine lyrical commitment. 
                  These are both quite biggish works, and take nearly half an 
                  hour in total, which is presumably why he chooses to unfurl 
                  a cascading series of Ländler from various sets - D366 
                  and D790 - along with some of the German Dances, D420. He selects 
                  seven of D366, six from D790, and only a quarter from the 12 
                  German Dances. Being Katsaris, he then reprises the first of 
                  D366 as a kind of mini-encore for this set. In the same way 
                  that the two Klavierstücke required a certain stamina 
                  at the beginning of a recital, so too does so extensive a sequence 
                  of dances. It’s a tribute both to his selection and musicianship 
                  - crisp rhythm, winning wit - that there is never a feeling 
                  of sameness. The three Liszt transcribed songs are amongst the 
                  most famous and susceptible to Katsaris’s singing legato 
                  phrasing and his technical excellence.  
                     
                  Katsaris has recorded Schubert’s B flat major sonata commercially, 
                  but I suspect he would choose to be remembered for this live 
                  performance rather than that rather plain Teldec one. It’s 
                  more alive, more rhythmically inflected and more communicative. 
                  After the sonata comes the first of the real encores. This is 
                  Katsaris’s own spontaneous improvisation on themes from 
                  Tchaikovsky and Wagner, a piece of nineteenth century braggadocio 
                  of considerable skill and, fortunately, compression. His barnstorming 
                  propensities are put to great use here. The recital ends with 
                  his take on Bach’s take on the slow movement of Marcello’s 
                  Oboe Concerto. It’s nicely done, but I must admit my own 
                  preference for Earl Wild’s altogether less florid arrangement 
                  and, indeed, performance.  
                     
                  Still, this two-disc set will be another mandatory acquisition 
                  for Katsaris collectors, whose hero has been captured in good 
                  sound.  
                     
                  Jonathan Woolf  
                   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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