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Friday, January 15, 2021

Nikolai Kapustin - Jazz Pieces for Piano


Information

Composer: Nikolai Kapustin
  • (01) Eight Concert Etudes
  • (09) Sonata Fantasy, Op. 39
  • (10) Suite in Old Style, Op. 28
  • (11) Variations, Op. 41

Nikolai Kapustin, piano
Date: 2000
Label: Boheme Music (recorded by Melodiya)


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Review

ARTISTIC QUALITY: 10 / SOUND QUALITY: 9

Nikolai Kapustin’s scintillating, boundlessly inventive piano music is the ultimate in “written out jazz”, as those who’ve heard Hyperion’s Kapustin releases with Marc-André Hamelin and Steven Osborne might well agree. Yet no one quite plays Kapustin like Kapustin himself. His technique yields nothing in power and virtuosity to Hamelin and Osborne, yet Kapustin often infuses his music with a stronger sense of swing and idiomatic fluency. I’ll cite several examples.

Osborne plays the First sonata’s rhapsodic opening in long, suave legato lines, while Kapustin’s sparser pedaling and more accentuated approach conveys more harmonic tension and improvisatory momentum. In the Op. 41 Variations, Hamelin’s dotted rhythms are accurate but slightly stiff, while Kapustin’s resilient backbeats evoke a hidden rhythm section.

Similar differences characterize the Op. 40 Etudes. Hamelin’s phrase tapering in No. 7 prettifies the loping Dave Brubeck-ish gait present in Kapustin’s gutsier, more elemental reading. On the other hand, while Kapustin’s slower tempo for No. 5 clarifies the melodic shape of the rapid left-hand figurations, the Prokofiev-like bite in Hamelin’s faster, more uniformly-voiced rendition proves equally valid. It’s also tough to choose between Hamelin’s dazzling sweep in No. 3 (the Toccatina) and Kapustin’s slower, harder hitting interpretation.

There’s nothing to complain about regarding the original mid-to-late 1980s Melodiya engineering, save for a slightly congested quality in loud passages. Thanks to Boheme for making this once hard-to-find treasure available again.

-- Jed Distler, ClassicsToday

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Nikolai Kapustin (22 November 1937 – 2 July 2020) was a Russian composer and pianist. Kapustin studied piano with Avrelian Rubakh (pupil of Felix Blumenfeld who also taught Simon Barere and Vladimir Horowitz) and subsequently with Alexander Goldenweiser at the Moscow Conservatory. Kapustin was steeped in both the traditions of classical virtuoso pianism and improvisational jazz. He fused these influences in his compositions, using jazz idioms in formal classical structures. Among his works are 20 piano sonatas, 6 piano concerti, sets of piano variations, études and concert studies.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikolai_Kapustin
https://www.nikolai-kapustin.info/

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