Bis are not a company 
                for half measures. They already have 
                several Sorabji discs in the catalogue 
                including the monumental Opus Clavicembalisticum. 
                Now they have set about recording the 
                composer’s grand cycle of one hundred 
                Etudes with Frederick Ullén. 
                Taken as a whole this ‘centaine’, at 
                seven hours, represents Sorabji’s second 
                longest work. His longest is the nine 
                hour Symphonic Variations. 
              
 
              
Sorabji’s piano writing 
                is typically elaborate from the torrential 
                upward sweep in Mouvementé 
                (I) via the wild and spiky V to the 
                grotesque hammering angularity of XXV 
                - a fantastic Medtnerian march. The 
                dramatic and passionate writing in between 
                can be found in the Tasso gallop and 
                rush of VII, the aristocratic swell 
                and crash of combers (X), the hard martellato 
                writing of XV and the icy hammering 
                of XIX. IX takes urgency to the edge 
                of manic. XVII passingly recalls the 
                writing of Warlock in his zany Codpieces. 
                Did Sorabji have the maelstrom in mind 
                in the patterned rushing and cross-currenting 
                of XI. Continuing the theme we seem 
                to hear in the Dolcemente scorrevole 
                (XXIII) the intricate whorls and swirls 
                of chiming tidal races and currents. 
                There is grotesquerie too, both in an 
                essay (XXII) involving glissandi on 
                chords and in the Vivace e leggiero 
                (II) - Rachmaninov in spate. Contrast 
                is found in IV in which it is as if 
                we hear the music through reflections 
                in fractured mirrors moving from shard 
                to shard in liquid ebb and flow. Speaking 
                of which, a more elaborate and romanticised 
                take on the subject matter of Griffes’ 
                Acqua Paola can be heard in III 
                alongside a sumptuous Rachmaninov-style 
                melody. XIII is an extremely impressionistic 
                piece: the suggestion of a silky gauze 
                held up to a wintry sun while XVIII 
                is in similar vein, yet more majestic. 
                XIV comprises a drift of melodic lines 
                shifting in voiles, overlapping clarifying 
                and blending. XX picks up on his Perfumed 
                Garden style in a sensual ecstatic 
                fusion of Chopin and William Baines 
              
 
              
Ullén was born 
                1968 and clearly lacks nothing in determination 
                and artistry in this most challenging 
                of music. Amongst his other recordings 
                is a disc of the complete Ligeti Etudes 
                for Wergo. He contributes the notes 
                for this issue. These can be read with 
                valuable general introductions by Kenneth 
                Derus one of the world's leading Sorabji 
                doyens. 
              
 
              
That this disc became 
                feasible at all is down to the editorial 
                work of Marc-André Hamelin, Simon 
                Abrahams and Alexander Abercrombie. 
              
 
              
Is it too much to hope 
                that Bis and Ullen will also tackle 
                Sorabji’s piano concertos? 
              
 
              
If you enjoy the piano 
                music of York Bowen, Medtner, Foulds 
                or Conlon Nancarrow and are prepared 
                to go just the extra mile you should 
                find this disc extremely rewarding. 
                Watch out for later volumes. 
              
Rob Barnett