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Friday, July 10, 2020

Vasilije Mokranjac - Complete Piano Works (Ratimir Martinović)


Information

Composer: Vasilije Mokranjac

CD1:
  • (01) Menuetto
  • (02) Theme and Eight Variations
  • (03) Sonata Romantica
  • (07) Préludes, Dance and March
  • (08) Seven Études
CD2:
  • (01) Six Dances
  • (07) Sonatine No. 1 in A minor
  • (09) Sonatine No. 2 in C major
  • (13) Suite 'Fragments'

Ratimir Martinović, piano
Date: 2019
Label: Grand Piano
https://grandpianorecords.com/Album/AlbumDetails/GP829-30

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Review

The Mokranjacs were a musical family. It’s not just that Vasilije’s great uncle was the composer Stevan Stojanović Mokranjac (1856-1914). Stevan has considerable prominence, celebrated on various Serbian postage stamps and his choral music was much broadcast by BBC Radio 3. Vassilije was Belgrade-born and also died there by his own hand.

CPO have already weighed in on behalf of Vassilije and this site carries two reviews of CPO’s chamber music disc, which recount that Vassilije composed five symphonies: 1961, 1965, 1967, 1972 and 1979; not that I have heard any of them. Fortunately, performances can be found, in the shape of radio broadcasts, on YouTube. I gather from Rob Sykes that there is a Serbian CD set (UKS Sokoj-MIC CD 7003) that features three of Mokranjac's symphonies (2, 4 and 5).

Sources refer to Mokranjac’s music falling into three periods (1944-1961, 1961–1972, 1972–1984) but, truth to tell, the changes, at least as evidenced here, were not violent. There were no operas and I have not heard any songs or choral works of his. The entire oeuvre is given over to instrumental music.

The piano music is played here by Ratimir Martinovic with precision and ardent abandon; no half measures. Such a shame that it never came to the attention of John Ogdon, Ronald Stevenson or Hamish Milne for more often than not it seems tailor made for their pianism, leonine, visionary or gentle. Martinovic throws himself into the experience. While much of what we hear is the stuff of stormy cliffs and a contest of the more violent passions the early Menuetto is simple, pastoral and winsome; think Blezard or Mayerl. This piece is not far distant from the music on Kirsten Johnson’s two Guild Albanian collections (Rapsodi and Kenge). The Theme and Eight Variations and the Sonata Romantica take no prisoners. This is no innocent middling-temperature material but is pungently and plungingly Rachmaninovian. Incidents are on a big fervent scale. After a tolling Marcia Funèbre there’s a Finale where sparks and shrapnel fly to every corner, unflinching. Martinovioc’s instrument is fully equal to the task. In the Prelude, Dance and March dreamy shadows lengthen and the pulse slows as Mokranjac explores more exotic liquefacient twists. Some of the Seven Etudes are very, very short, with what would otherwise be a MacDowell forest pool having its surface disturbed by trilling breeze (same goes for the Uguale). There’s a motoric self-absorbed Staccato, a trilling Presto with a touch of Falla, a ruthless Presto Possibile and a concluding Presto Ritmico which evokes shadows and punched-out drama in a very muscular feat. Not for the last time would you be forgiven for thinking about Prokofiev.

On the second disc the Six Dances are from 1950-57. Their moods range from delicate, melodious and sleepy to explosive maelstroms. The middle ground in these six works recalled John Ireland’s subtlety and Arnold Bax’s devils. The two Sonatinas are from the same decade. They may be sonatinas in duration but not in sound-world. The First (in two movements) is fully grown-up and ends in a short self-absorbed and unsmiling Prestissimo-Allegro. The Second is in four very short movements: harsh tempered, icy, flooded with forward impetus and with a grand statement in the finale. The same era gave birth to the Suite 'Fragments' in six little movements: irritable, dank and cold, tolling in twilight and ending in a Grave that takes us right up to the brink of Coleridge’s “Alph, the sacred river” that ran through caverns “measureless to man …. Down to a sunless sea”. These are the products of a pianistic tiger. The Suite 'Intimate Voices' takes the listener to the Mokranjac of the early 1970s. It is as if the composer reveals a gentle heart and a stilling and consolatory voice. In its near 14 minutes we also experience intimate slow flurries of danger and violent punctuation. The Suite 'Echoes' is in a single track. Its harsh, exciting, kinetic collisions allow space for ‘blocky’, iron-hearted toil akin to Messiaen and Boulez. Even so, at the close, there are tiny silvery bell sounds.

These two discs¸ staggeringly well recorded and satisfyingly documented, at times convey the sense of a polished slatey incline. The listener is unable to hold a reliable footing and experiences unnerving realms. That said, the 1984 Prelude hesitantly steps out into some unknown region. Before that the somewhat Gallic Five Preludes (in one track) of 1975 are shocking, cool and suffused with balm. The young pianist intent on convincing his adjudicators and audiences should track down this pair of CDs, as should even mildly enterprising adherents of unusual piano music of the last century. Often very impressive as well as endearing from time to time.

-- Rob BarnettMusicWeb International

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Vasilije Mokranjac (Belgrade, 11 September 1923 – Belgrade, 27 May 1984) was a Serbian composer, professor of composition at the Faculty of Music in Belgrade and a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. He was one of the most prominent Serbian composers in the second half of the 20th century. Although famed for his symphonies, he also wrote piano music, as well as music for radio, film and theatre. He won the most prestigious awards in former Yugoslavia, including the October Prize, the award of the Yugoslav Radio-Diffusion, as well as the Lifetime Achievement Award.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasilije_Mokranjac

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Ratimir Martinović is an award-winning Montenegrin pianist. He studied at the Academy of Art in the class of Kemal Gekić, graduating in 1999. Martinović received his master's degree in 2002 and currently works at the Academy of Arts, as the youngest piano professor. He has performed in over 350 recitals, chamber concerts, concertos with orchestra in all major domestic concert halls, as well as in Rome, Salzburg, Bonn, London, Taipei, Miami, Helsinki, Warsaw, Paris, Luxembourg, etc. Martinović also regularly performs in international music festivals, and is an experienced chamber musician.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ratimir_Martinovi%C4%87

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4 comments:

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  2. Could you please reupload this one? Thanks again.

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  3. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Skip Ad' (or 'Get link').
    If you are asked to download or install anything, IGNORE, only download from file hosting site (mega.nz).
    If MEGA shows 'Bandwidth Limit Exceeded' message, try to create a free account.

    CD1 http://aciterar.com/4IZL
    CD2 http://aciterar.com/4IZM
    or
    CD1 https://uii.io/WsN9Jf
    CD2 https://uii.io/4e4Mh0
    or
    CD1 https://exe.io/Rdp1aO
    CD2 https://exe.io/oeQ7E11

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