This has to be one 
                of my ‘Records of the Year 2006’. Hamelin 
                is known for his explorations of the 
                piano repertoire, but this borders on 
                genius. The Dukas is not unknown territory, 
                for sure, but it needs a shove. The 
                recording by John Ogdon is not easy 
                to find - last seen on EMI Matrix, if 
                I am not mistaken. Margaret Fingerhut 
                on Chandos does not really cut it. Hamelin 
                plays it for all he is worth. Top that 
                off with state-of-the-art booklet notes 
                by Roger Nichols and a gorgeous Monet 
                on the front cover, and this must be 
                a sure-fire winner. 
              
 
              
The sheer length of 
                the Dukas sonata presumably accounts 
                for its absence from concert programmes. 
                Yet it is a wonderful work. Indeed hearing 
                the very opening goes some way towards 
                explaining the duration – one is presented 
                with a mouth-watering flow of ideas 
                - exquisitely balanced in this performance. 
                Hamelin, what’s more, seems born to 
                play this. It is as if the music could 
                go on forever, almost Scriabin-like 
                at times in its unwillingness to assert 
                harmonic arrival points. The recording 
                (Andrew Keener and Simon Eadon) is demonstration 
                class. The highest compliment I can 
                give it is to comment that one does 
                not notice its excellence. Rather, attention 
                is focused completely on the music, 
                with no tinny trebles or muffled basses 
                to get in the way. 
              
 
              
The second movement 
                (‘Calme, un peu lent’) is elusive, fragmentary 
                and very tender indeed. Once again it 
                is the effortless flow that is most 
                appealing. Hamelin’s legendary technique 
                comes in useful for the ‘Vivement’ third 
                movement. The music positively buzzes; 
                the contrasting sections are real aural 
                balm. The grand finale - very identifiably 
                French chords at the beginning - seems 
                to last much less than its fourteen-minute 
                duration, once again because of Hamelin’s 
                delivery of the effortless ebb and flow. 
                Amazingly, at no point along the way 
                does this work seem overlong. 
              
 
              
The inspired coupling 
                is by Abel Decaux. Decaux was an organ 
                student of Widor and Guilmant and a 
                composition student of Massenet at the 
                Paris Conservatoire. He acted as organist 
                at Sacré Coeur for a quarter 
                of a century before moving to the States 
                in 1923 - to teach organ at the Eastman 
                School of Music. Apparently the music 
                on this disc is all that is known by 
                him. 
              
 
              
Clairs de lune 
                is a set of four pieces. The first, 
                ‘Menuet passé’, emerges out of 
                a Debussian haze. Very harmonically 
                sensitive, it contains some spikiness 
                and almost abrasive sound explosions. 
                ‘La ruelle’ is mesmeric Night Music 
                (what is the dynamic marking at the 
                end, I wonder – ppppppp?). A 
                mysterious ‘Le cimetière’ leads 
                to a ‘La mer’ that invokes the mystery 
                of the sea; astonishing tremolandi, 
                even for Hamelin! Simply stunning. 
              
 
              
Colin Clarke