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 Support 
              us financially by purchasing this disc 
              through 
              MusicWeb 
              for £18.75 postage paid World-wide. 
               
              
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            Dinu LIPATTI 
              (1917-1950) 
              CD 1 
              Concertino en style classique Op. 3* (1936) [17:49] 
              Sonatine for the left hand (1941) [8:40] 
              Piano Sonata in D minor (1932) [22:07] 
              Navarra (Albéniz, arr Lipatti, 1940) [5:45] 
              Nocturne in F sharp minor Op. 6 [4:57] 
              Nocturne in A minor [3:38] 
              CD 2 
              Fantasie Op. 8 (1940) [30:03] 
              Pastorale in F, BWV 590 (J.S. Bach transc. Lipatti) [9:21] 
              Two arias from Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd! 
              BWV 208 (J.S. Bach, tanscr. Lipatti) [7:12] 
                
              Luiza Borac (piano) 
              *Academy of St Martin in the Fields/Jaime Martin 
              rec. 23-27 April 2012, Jesus-Christus-Kirche, Berlin and 11 July 
              2012, St John’s Smith Square, London (Concertino) 
                
              AVIE RECORDS AV2271 [63:21 + 47:06] 
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                  It is rare to come across performances and recordings of Dinu 
                  Lipatti’s compositions, and the last time I came across the 
                  Sonatine in an excellent recital for the left hand 
                  by Antoine Rebstein (see review). 
                  Lipatti’s reputation as one of the 20th century’s 
                  greatest pianists has unsurprisingly overshadowed his work as 
                  a composer. No doubt encouraged and inspired by his godfather 
                  George Enescu, in his time he trained with the best, studying 
                  with Paul Dukas, Alfred Cortot and Nadia Boulanger while at 
                  the École normale de musique in Paris. 
                    
                  With its numerous premičre recordings, this double disc set 
                  from fellow Rumanian Luiza Borac is an instant reference for 
                  Lipatti’s works for piano. Dinu Lipatti had a Bechstein piano 
                  at his home at Fundateanca in Romania and often favoured Bechstein 
                  instruments as a performer. Luiza Borac has recorded these solo 
                  works on a Bechstein as a gesture towards a more faithful reproduction 
                  of his sound as a composer, and the solo recordings certainly 
                  have a marvellously full and musical sound. 
                    
                  The Concertino in Classical Style is a student work, 
                  and is an intriguing synthesis of influences and homages, including 
                  a clear allusion to Bach’s ‘Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring’ in 
                  the first movement. The gorgeous Adagio molto second 
                  movement has some of Stravinsky’s neo-classical flavour, as 
                  do the playful Allegretto and final Allegro molto 
                  which follow. It has to be admitted that there is a degree of 
                  aimless wandering about in some of this music, but it certainly 
                  is worth exploring, having many moments of great fun and making 
                  some potent expressive points. The piano is arguably a little 
                  too far forward in the recorded balance, but the Academy of 
                  St Martin in the Fields plays with gusto and the work serves 
                  as a fine introduction to Luiza Borac’s virtuoso technique and 
                  sensitive musicality. 
                    
                  Composed of “purely Romanian themes and with much brio”, the 
                  Sonatina for Left Hand is given a terrific performance 
                  by Borac, the illusion of two handed performance entirely convincing 
                  and indeed, pretty breathtaking, the pungency of the folk music 
                  content more emphatic than with Rebstein. The Sonata in 
                  D minor was Lipatti’s first, written at the age of 14. 
                  This first recording reveals a staggeringly precocious talent, 
                  heavily into the gestures of Liszt and pianistic techniques 
                  of Chopin and other Romantics. Strongly influenced it may be 
                  but this goes further than pastiche, showing an ear for some 
                  pretty sophisticated and at times even modern sounding harmonic 
                  language. This substantial piece received a mention at the 1932 
                  National Georges Enescu Competition for Composition, and while 
                  one can imagine why its high-romantic bombast might have seen 
                  it missing out on an award, it does seem remarkable that it 
                  has taken 80 years for someone to record it. 
                    
                  Another first recording, Albéniz’s unfinished Navarra 
                  was re-worked by Lipatti in 1940. The pianistic qualities of 
                  the piece have been impressively enhanced and beefed-up somewhat, 
                  giving it quite an orchestral feel while maintaining much of 
                  the identity of the original. Lipatti wrote three Nocturnes 
                  in 1939, but only the F sharp minor one has survived, with its 
                  slinky harmonies and expressively lyrical melodic lines. The 
                  A minor Nocturne is an earlier piece from 1937 and 
                  more overtly folk-music derived, using as it does a Moldavian 
                  Christmas carol – not that many of us would spot such sources. 
                  Borac brings out all of this character in these pieces, while 
                  also finding and exploiting their impressionistic colours. 
                    
                  Moving on to the second disc, and we immediately enter a seriously 
                  different expressive atmosphere with the Fantasie Op. 8. 
                  Mark Ainley’s booklet notes point out that this is Lipatti’s 
                  “longest and most complex solo piano composition”, and this 
                  is by no means hard to believe. You can sense the composer becoming 
                  more involved and intertwined with his material in the five 
                  movements of this masterpiece, allowing thinner textures to 
                  speak for themselves in exploratory and often heartfelt simplicity. 
                  There are folk-music elements and some ideas which seem to point 
                  fairly directly towards Bartók, but this is music with intrinsic 
                  and individual quality, filled with fascinating nuance and hardly 
                  a note wasted. If you were yet to be convinced, this is the 
                  one piece which makes us understand why Nadia Boulanger would 
                  have written, “When the compositions of Dinu Lipatti are all 
                  printed, the greatness of his gift and of his craftsmanship 
                  will be recognised. It will become obvious that he was really 
                  a composer… who found his pleasure and his real life in the 
                  process, and who used the technical means of his art to create 
                  the emotions resulting from achieved beauty.” 
                    
                  Once the apotheosis of the remarkable eleven-minute final Allegro 
                  of the Fantasie has sounded there seems little else 
                  that can be said, and the programme winds up with some lovely 
                  transcriptions of Bach. Added poignancy is given to the Andante 
                  cantabile of the Pastorale in F when we are told 
                  that this was the last piece Lipatti ever played, though Luiza 
                  Borac thankfully avoids loading the piece with extra sentimentality. 
                  The transcriptions from Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre 
                  Jagd! were the last pieces Lipatti produced in 1950. 
                    
                  While reasonably rich in passionately youthful outings this 
                  programme is worth every penny of its asking price, not only 
                  for its fine recording qualities and Luiza Borac’s superb playing, 
                  but for undiscovered gems – in particular the amazing Fantaisie, 
                  as well as the fascinating Concertino. If your collection 
                  has any cherished recordings by Dinu Lipatti as pianist then 
                  you owe it to yourself to complete your picture of this legendary 
                  musician in his most personal and potent creative work. 
                    
                  Dominy Clements 
                Support 
                  us financially by purchasing this disc 
                  through 
                  MusicWeb 
                  for £18.75 postage paid 
                  World-wide.  
                  
                
  
                    
                
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                       
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
             
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