Endless Song
    John METCALF (b. 1946)
    Endless Song (1999) [5.21]
    
Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
    Songs without words: Venetian Gondola Song, Op.30/6: Hunting Song, Op.19b/3 
    [5.30]
    
Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
    Ave Maria, D839 transcr. Liszt [6.27]
    
Robert SCHUMANN (1810-1856)
    Widmung, Op.25/1 transcr. Liszt [4.18]
    
Frederick CHOPIN (1810-1849)
    The maiden’s wish (c. 1829) transcr. Liszt [4.06]
    
Josef SÚK (1874-1935)
    Love Song, Op.7/1 [6.43]
    
Francis POULENC (1899-1963)
    Improvisation No 15 in C minor ‘Hommage à Edith Piaf’ (1959) 
    [3.43]
    
George GERSHWIN (1898-1937)
    George Gershwin’s Song Book (1932): The man I love; Oh, lady be good; 
    That certain feeling; ’s wonderful; Do it again; Strike up the band 
    [8.26]
    
Isaac ALBÉNIZ (1860-1909)
    Chants d’Espagne, Op.232: Córdoba: Seguidillas [9.32]
    
Carlos GUASTAVINO (1912-2000)
    El ceibo (1958) [3.14]
    Bailecito (1940) [3.39]
    
Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873-1943)
    Morceaux de Fantaisie, Op.3: Mélodie [5.07]
    Vocalise, Op.34/14 [6.34]
    Margaret Fingerhut (piano)
    rec. Potton Hall, Dunwich, Suffolk, 17-18 October 2013
    
CHANDOS CHAN10826 [73.11]
    
    
 Margaret Fingerhut has survived physical problems in 
      recent years – due, it seems, to a malfunctioning automatic nervous 
      system – which at several points led her to face the end of her musical 
      career. She has overcome, and with the help of a distinguished surgeon she 
      is now able to perform and to record.
      
      It would plumb the depths of irony were it possible to note that her performances 
      have suffered but thankfully this is very much not the case. This recording 
      is a vindication of her talents.
      
      Song is the theme and the piece that lends its name to the disc is John 
      Metcalf’s 
Endless Song. Metcalf, born in 1946, wrote it in 
      1999 and its rich folkloric lyricism makes a hugely favourable impression. 
      She chooses two of Mendelssohn’s 
Songs without Words allowing 
      them to contrast nicely, with the sway of the 
Venetian Gondola Song 
      prefacing the bright-toned, open-air 
Hunting Song. The Schubert-Liszt 
      
Ave Maria transcription is thoughtfully and affectionately played, 
      Schumann’s 
Widmung, again in Liszt’s arrangement, attesting 
      to the clever programming concepts – contrasts, doubles, hyphenated 
      Liszt and the like – as is Chopin’s 
The Maiden’s Wish 
      which is the last of the trio of Liszt transcriptions.
      
      She plays 
Píseň lásky, or the Love 
      Song, by Josef Suk, one of his most popular piano pieces, though hardly 
      anyone performs it in concert or much records it these days – oddly, 
      the violin and piano version is just as popular. Fingerhut plays it passionately 
      building up to the climax beautifully. It’s a better performance than 
      Kvapil’s old standby, though Moravec is in a special class, and significantly 
      slower. Fingerhut really does play this with great attention to tone and 
      detail, with marvellous results. The poignant chanson that Poulenc wrote 
      in homage to Edith Piaf also casts its spell in this reading.
      
      She plays six pieces from George Gershwin’s Song Book and has chosen 
      wisely, not sticking to a chronological sequencing but programming for maximum 
      effectiveness. Albéniz’s reflective Córdoba contrasts 
      with the terpsichorean Seguidillas rather as did the two Mendelssohn songs. 
      Two pieces by Carlos Guastavino elaborate on this kind of theme, leading 
      on naturally from Albéniz. They’re captivatingly lively, not 
      least the folk dance Bailecito, composed in 1940. The recital ends with 
      the Mélodie and Vocalise of Rachmaninov, the latter in the arrangement 
      by Alan Richardson who evokes – and Fingerhut brings out - rich colours 
      in the central passages.
      
      With attractive sound quality in Potton Hall, this encore disc can be warmly 
      welcomed, and more Fingerhut on disc anticipated with pleasure and admiration.
      
      
Jonathan Woolf
      
    Previous review: 
Paul Corfield Godfrey