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Friday, January 5, 2018

Giovanni Sgambati - Piano Concerto; Orchestral Works (Francesco Caramiello)


Information

Composer: Giovanni Sgambati
  1. Piano Concerto in G minor, Op.15: I. Moderato maestoso
  2. Piano Concerto in G minor, Op.15: II. Romanza: Andante sostenuto
  3. Piano Concerto in G minor, Op.15: III. Allegro animato
  4. Cola di Rienzo, overture
  5. Berceuse-Rêverie (orch. Jules Massenet)

Francesco Caramiello, piano (1-3)
Nuremberg Philharmonic Orchestra
Fabrizio Ventura, conductor

Date: 2000/2014
Label: Tactus (originally recorded by ASV)


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Review

During the Romantic revival of the 1970s, Sgambati's concerto turned up on a Genesis LP, but the composer didn't gain any further traction from it. Tactus is certainly making up for lost time, reissuing the composer's complete piano music on seven CDs, along with this 2000 recording of the concerto and two shorter pieces, originally issued in 2001 on ASV 1097 and made available again in 2015 by Presto Classical – see article by Rob Barnett.

Sgambati, a pianist and conductor in Rome, was noted for his promotion of concerts of instrumental music; unlike many of his contemporaries, he seems to have had little interest in opera, and never composed one. He studied with Liszt for a time; that composer's influence is felt generally in a flair for grandly dramatic gestures balanced by passages of serene, uncluttered lyricism, and specifically in such details as the assignment of cantabile phrases to midrange strings.

The concerto's long first movement (twenty-three minutes) feels more like a fantasy than an actual sonata movement, although the composer makes the varied succession of colourful episodes sound organic. After the opening orchestral phrases of the central Romanza, where we might have expected a rhapsodic, lyrical solo part, the piano states its theme starkly, almost baldly. The beginning of the finale is unabashedly proclamatory, with full-throated brass and string fanfares followed by the piano's chordal theme; the second theme is lighter in texture, with rippling arpeggios. It's the piano, rather than the orchestra, that careens into full-bodied thematic statements here, and the writing in the home stretch is lively and dashing, with a few unexpected pianos in the orchestra.

Francesco Caramiello is an adept soloist, commanding the technique required for the pyrotechnics, but putting it to good musical use. In the first movement, the busy episode at 5:38 is expressive as well as deft, though a splice at 5:45 hasn't entirely been concealed; later, he effectively scales down the textures along with the dynamics. In the Romanza, however, Sgambati lays a trap, placing the tune in the middle voice, and the pianist falls into it, letting the upper graces sound like part of the tune.

Tactus has added recorded premieres of two other Sgambati works. The early, twenty-minute concert overture Cola di Rienzo is effectively a symphonic poem, making use of a Lisztian chromatic harmonic palette. The strings' opening chorale is solemn and oddly disturbed; then midrange strings intone a broad melodic line, embroidered with triplets by woodwinds and higher strings. A turbulent tutti in agitated triple time launches the main Allegro, shortly yielding to duple time with syncopations. The scoring is fuller here than in the concerto: there are some lighter sonorities, to be sure, but no real chamber textures.

The Berceuse-Rêverie, a late piano piece, is presented in an arrangement "for small orchestra" by Jules Massenet. The genteel Frenchman might seem poorly matched to the demonstrative Italian, but Massenet, unexpectedly, plays with the same sorts of colours and textures as we've already heard, just scaled down; the piece comes off with a lovely delicacy.

The orchestra sounds good; is it a descendant of the "Nuremberg Symphony" that used to turn up on budget LPs? The string tone, at once warm and plangently reedy, is peculiarly well suited to those midrange lines. The sound is excellent. The English rendering of the soloist's informative program note, however, is faulty. I'm willing to blame the translator for "[the Overture] has many élans that remind us of Schumann" -- "dash" probably comes closest to the Italian slanci here -- but when Caramiello tags the concerto's 2/4 finale as a "saltarello," that's his own mistake.

-- Stephen Francis Vasta, MusicWeb International

More reviews:
http://www.classical-music.com/review/sgambati
https://www.classicstoday.com/review/review-7024/
https://www.audaud.com/giovanni-sgambati-piano-concerto-cola-di-rienzo-overture-berceuse-reverie-francesco-caramiello-p-nuremberg-philharmonic-fabrizio-ventura-tactus/

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Giovanni Sgambati (May 28, 1841 – December 14, 1914) was an Italian pianist, conductor and composer. Sgambati was a consistent advocate of Italian instrumental music and throughout his life refused to write an opera. This also explains his desire to make the development of non-Italian symphonic music known in his homeland. His own compositions were influenced by the music of Beethoven, Wagner and Liszt. Sgambati composed two symphonies, several works of chamber music and many works for piano, as well as songs and sacred music, including a requiem.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Sgambati

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Francesco Caramiello studied with Vincenzo Vitale, Massimo Bertucci and Bruno Mazzotta at the "San Pietro a Majella" Conservatory. He performed as a soloist all over Europe and North America with famous orchestras, and also gives concerts on period instruments. His discography includes the concertos and piano music of Martucci (ASV), a CD dedicated to nineteenth-century Neapolitan composers (Opus 111), the complete piano music of Giovanni Sgambati (Tactus) and a series of discs dedicated to American composers, range from Gottschalk to Carter, for the Nireo and Agorà labels.

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