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Saturday, January 1, 2022

Johannes Brahms; Béla Bartók; Franz Liszt - Piano Works (Alexandre Kantorow)


Information

Composer: Johannes Brahms; Béla Bartók; Franz Liszt
  1. Brahms - Rhapsody No. 1 in B minor, Op. 79 No. 1
  2. Brahms - Piano Sonata No. 2 in F sharp minor, Op. 2: I. Allegro non troppo, ma energico
  3. Brahms - Piano Sonata No. 2 in F sharp minor, Op. 2: II. Andante con espressione
  4. Brahms - Piano Sonata No. 2 in F sharp minor, Op. 2: III. Scherzo. Allegro - Trio. Poco più moderato
  5. Brahms - Piano Sonata No. 2 in F sharp minor, Op. 2: IV. Finale. Sostenuto - Allegro non troppo e rubato - Molto sostenuto
  6. Bartók - Rhapsody, Op. 1 (Sz. 26)
  7. Liszt - Hungarian Rhapsody No. 11

Alexandre Kantorow, piano
Date: 2021

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Review

By June 2019 when, at the age of 22, Alexandre Kantorow became the first French pianist to win the Tchaikovsky Competition, he already had four recordings to his credit: French violin and piano sonatas with his father, Jean-Jacques (NoMad Music, 2014); the two canonic Liszt concertos and Malédiction (BIS, A/15); a Russian recital (7/17); and the last three Saint-Saëns concertos (6/19). Since his Moscow victory, he has been the piano soloist in a new recording of music by José Serebrier (4/20) and, most recently, has a solo release of his own, including rhapsodies by Brahms, Bartók, and Liszt.

Kantorow is obviously an outstanding pianist and musician with an agile technique that allows him perfect clarity in the most complex textures, abundant sensitivity and refinement, and maturity well beyond his years. For the final round with orchestra in Moscow last year he played the Tchaikovsky G major and Brahms B flat Concertos, a remarkable feat given the enormous demands of both those works. In interviews he’s called Brahms his ‘favourite’, and that affinity is apparent here.

A passionate reading of the first of the two Op 79 Rhapsodies serves as the overture to Brahms’s sprawling F sharp minor Sonata, a symphony locked within a piano sonata if there ever were one. Kantorow’s approach to the sonata is both thoughtful and persuasive, with ample stores of sympathy for its 19-year-old composer. He brings a welcome sense of coherence to the Andante con espressione which, in other hands, can sound like alternating whispers and shouts. His performance of the rhapsodic finale, perhaps part of the rationale for the sonata’s inclusion in this programme of rhapsodies, is certainly among the most convincing.

Bartók was roughly the age Kantorow is now when he composed his Op 1. With his piano transcription of Strauss’s Ein Heldenleben already behind him, Bartók had yet to undertake the folkloristic field research with Kodály that would inform his mature style. Kantorow hews a confident path through this dense thicket of post-Liszt-Mosonyi-Erkel rhetoric with its heavy Straussian canopy, imbuing it with a credible sense of characteristic parlando rubato. That he does so without overplaying is cause for even greater wonder. Arrival finally at the 11th Liszt Rhapsody feels like the achievement of an oasis of purest classicism and succinct expression, and provides a showcase for Kantorow’s ability to maintain clarity and poise at breakneck speed.

Rarely has the growth of a young artist been so amply documented in recordings as has Kantorow’s. I’ll be among those eagerly anticipating its continued flowering.

-- Patrick Rucker, Gramophone

More reviews:
ClassicsToday  ARTISTIC QUALITY: 9 / SOUND QUALITY: 9

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Alexandre Kantorow (born 20 May 1997) is a French pianist whose father is the violinist and conductor Jean-Jacques Kantorow. He studied with Pierre-Alain Volondat, Igor Lazko, Frank Braley and Haruko Ueda, and is currently studying with Rena Shereshevskaya at the École Normale de Musique de Paris. Described by Gramophone as a "fire-breathing virtuoso with a poetic charm" and by Fanfare as "Liszt reincarnated", he won the first prize, gold medal, and Grand Prix at the 16th International Tchaikovsky Competition in 2019, being the first French winner in the history of the competition.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandre_Kantorow

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