Wow. This is very frequently recorded music, Alessandra
Ammara is not a household name, and the cover art is a little chintzy,
so I did not expect much from this CD. Goodness was I wrong. Ammara
is a distinctive artist with a truly unique view of Maurice Ravel’s
piano music, and these interpretations are like no others. She takes
big risks, daring ones, and they may occasionally fizzle but they still
make this album stand out from the crowd. (Editor - Dominy Clements
was equally impressed by Ammara's Schumann - see
review).
Her
Jeux d’eau is comparatively slow but has a beautiful
soft touch; the play of the waves is water is well-captured, and it
feels like it is warm and glittering under the sun. The
Sonatine,
with little staccato touches but exactly the right air of perfumed classical-era
elegance, impresses, and
Miroirs does too. “Une barque”
is unusually slow, but no less compelling for it because Ammara displays
such mastery of color and of the pieces dynamic range; “Alborada,”
by comparison, is as glittery as can be. The highlights are the atmospheric,
spare keystrokes of “Oiseaux tristes” and “Les cloches,”
which share a tendency with
Gaspard to have exaggerated dynamic
pushes and pulls.
In
Gaspard de la Nuit, Ammara presents a very slow “Ondine”
(7:30!) which really dedicates itself to the same kind of water imagery
as one hears in
Jeux d’eau. The climax is gigantic. “Le
gibet” is the opposite of monotone: its dynamic range is almost
operatic, enough to probably thoroughly divide listeners’ opinions.
Most surprising is “Scarbo”, where, in the hushed central
passage (beginning 5:40), certain repeated notes stick loudly out from
the dark murmurings. There’s also a novel, clattering phrasing
given to certain chords at the climaxes. I heard details I’d never
heard voiced properly before, and although there are eccentricities
which give me pause, there are others which have haunted my memory for
days.
All in all, this
Gaspard is decidedly eccentric, even weird,
but to me utterly compelling. Other readings - Sudbin, Schuch, Pogorelich
- are this steely and forceful, but Ammara’s feels like it has
only just come out of the fire and still glows red. She’s not
authentic to the text, and is maybe over-the-top, but maybe irresistible.
That’s true of her Ravel generally: even where it steps out of
orthodoxy, it’s irresistible. She’s a compelling artist
with a real, individual voice. I’d take this over Generic Ravel
Album #539 every day of the week, and at least for now I’m taken
enough with her gigantic, dramatic, even operatic way with this music
to defend it against any critic. This is a major release.
Brian Reinhart
She’s a compelling, irresistible artist and the playing is never
generic. I’ll defend these gigantic, dramatic readings against
any foe.