Full marks to BIS for 
                presenting these arrangements and opening 
                the window onto how one of Mozart’s 
                own students saw two of the ‘biggest’ 
                of his teacher’s concertos. Hummel studied 
                with Mozart from 1785-1787 (contemporary, 
                therefore, with the works on this disc). 
                German-based Japanese pianist Fumiko 
                Shiraga and her friends play the arrangements 
                for all they are worth, as if daring 
                us, the listeners, to hear them as ‘second-bests’ 
                at our peril. Fascinating, also, are 
                the decorations to the solo line courtesy 
                of Hummel. He can hardly be blamed for 
                these – he was a major virtuoso in his 
                own right, and they give us insight 
                into how Mozart was viewed at this time 
                and what liberties might have been taken. 
                What’s more, they are never overblown 
                or unstylish. 
              
 
              
This is not the first 
                disc of this type to come from Shiraga’s 
                fingers – she has recorded chamber versions 
                of the Chopin Concerti for piano, string 
                quartet and double-bass (CD847) and 
                the first two Beethoven Concertos (with 
                the Bremen Soloists, CD1177). Shiraga 
                plays with the utmost musicality, a 
                trait shared equally by her partners 
                here. Scaling down the forces for the 
                ‘Sturm und Drang’ of the Don Giovanni-isch 
                D minor and the large gestures of the 
                grandiose C major, K503 may seem a risk 
                on Hummel’s part, but it certainly pays 
                off. Perhaps what makes the disc work 
                so well also is Shiraga’s attention 
                to detail, be it phraseology, pedalling, 
                articulation or tonal shadings. 
              
 
              
It is admittedly very 
                strange to hear the piano joining in 
                the opening tutti of the D minor, a 
                sort of cross between continuo and proto-soloist, 
                and the magic of the piano’s quiet first 
                entry is somewhat diminished because 
                the contrast of timbres is, naturally, 
                spoilt. Here it emerges from the preceding 
                music. Still Shiraga goes on to delight 
                the ear with even and clear semi-quavers. 
                She only gets carried away at one point 
                (an octave ascent at 7’29). But the 
                really interesting aspect on this is 
                the extended cadenza (by Hummel, of 
                course). Harmonically more daring than 
                its surroundings and quite wide-ranging 
                in its emotional scope, it uses the 
                lower register to great effect and is 
                well worth hearing. Shiraga charts its 
                course confidently. 
              
 
              
It is Shiraga’s musicality 
                that impresses throughout, and nowhere 
                more than in the slow movement. Here 
                the chamber music is entirely apt, and 
                the initial civility from all sides 
                contrasts well with the more dramatic 
                sections. Shiraga always ensures there 
                is no blurring in the bass, and has 
                various opportunities to show off her 
                characterful right-hand staccati. A 
                shame that the finale could have been 
                that much more unbuttoned in its explosion 
                of D minor energy (the opening arpeggiation 
                is hardly the upwardly-moving rocket 
                it can be). Yet there is real verve 
                to this Allegro assai overall. It will 
                not disappoint. 
              
 
              
If the smaller resources 
                might be seen to have problems with 
                the angst of No. 20, it would be the 
                celebratory aspect of No. 25 that should 
                be belittled. Yet something of the scale 
                is maintained, and contrasts are impressive. 
                Shiraga’s finger-work, so clear and 
                pearly in the D minor, is confirmed 
                here as a thing to treasure. The delight 
                in chamber interaction from all quarters 
                is pure joy (it is impossible to single 
                out a single player throughout the disc, 
                really). The cadenza is superb – a real 
                flight of the imagination. Just very 
                occasionally the thought that Shiraga 
                should just let go does rear its head, 
                but nevertheless there is so much to 
                enjoy here this should not seriously 
                put anyone off. 
              
 
              
The slow movement brings 
                with it some lovely, tasteful ornaments 
                and a marvellously expressive piano/flute 
                duet (around 4’42). The civilised aspect 
                of the finale fits these forces well 
                (the transferral of ‘horn-signal’ gestures 
                is surprisingly effective). 
              
 
              
There is much joy to 
                be gleaned from this product, and Shiraga 
                is to be congratulated on her ongoing 
                series of ‘chamber concertos’. What 
                with Shiraga and Ogawa, BIS are sitting 
                on a veritable pianistic goldmine … 
              
 
              
Colin Clarke