Piano sonata no.2 in g sharp minor op.19 'Fantasy Sonata' (1897) [12:33]
rec. no details given
For her solo CD debut disc Ukrainian pianist Violina
Petrychenko has chosen piano works by Scriabin and fellow Ukrainian Viktor
Kosenko. Kosenko remains little known or recorded though the declared world
première recording of his second piano sonata is in fact erroneous
since its debut on disc was by another Ukrainian pianist Natalya Shkoda
on
Centaur
Records CRS 3109 back in 2011 on which all three of his piano sonatas
are presented. That said this disc is interesting because of the similarities
between the two composers: one born in Moscow, the other in St Petersburg,
both of them admirers of Chopin, Kosenko also of Scriabin, and both of them
dying at tragically young ages robbing us of so much more that they might
have written.
Petrychenko’s programme is one that encourages comparisons with her
playing similar works by each composer. The otherworldliness that characterises
Scriabin’s music is immediately apparent in the first of the
2
Poèmes op.32. Its simple lines transport the listener away from
the cares of the world while the second is much more powerful. The first
of Kosenko’s two poems also embodies a dreamy quality with the second
again a more striking affair.
We then have three mazurkas by each of them, both sets being their op. 3,
in which Chopin’s influence is marked. That said, each of them stamps
his own very different personality upon them even if Kosenko’s mazurkas
are especially Chopinesque. The latter recall an age well before that of
their composition.
Scriabin’s two movement piano sonata, dramatic and dreamlike by turns,
is ‘classic’ Scriabin. Kosenko’s three movement work could
also be thought to come from the same stable if we were not told of its
composer’s identity. However, similar in nature though it may be to
his idol’s work, Kosenko’s sonata has an originality that would
surely have been further developed had he lived longer than his 42 years.
Its central slow movement is an extremely affecting song without words.
The title of the disc —
Slavic Nobility — refers to
the fact that both composers came from noble families. It also alludes to
the music which has a noble quality. I can take as much Scriabin as record
companies can throw at me and now I find that Kosenko’s music is just
as infectious. I’m hopeful we’ll have more such discs coming
our way. From what I’ve read there’s plenty more to explore
from this little known composer.
Petrychenko who has made her home in Germany is perfectly at home with all
this music and plays it with both commitment and affection. The disc is
very well recorded.
I counted three different spellings of Scriabin on this disc: Scriabin,
Scrjabin and Scriabin. The latter is the one ARS put against the track listings
but I prefer Scriabin.
Steve Arloff