Stravinsky
Solo Piano Music Oxana Shevchenko (piano)
Delphian DCD34203 115:55 mins (2 discs) It is surprising there is not more. The piano was central to Stravinsky’s creativity throughout his career, being a compositional tool at which ideas could be manipulated and new textures and sonorities could be discovered. Despite this, he wrote relatively little for the instrument beyond miniatures, occasional works, or pieces related to orchestral canvasses. By far the longest work is the early Sonata in F sharp minor, which is clearly from Stravinsky’s compositional apprenticeship. By comparison, the later Sonata from 1924 and Serenade in A (1925) may each be barely a third the length, but they are musically far more substantive. Indeed, it is a mark of Stravinsky’s genius that even an apparently trivial work, such as
Les cinq doigts, putatively a set of exercises for beginners, grabs the attention, especially in this spiky, yet charming performance from Oxana Shevchenko.
Whether scintillating in the fearsome Three Movements from Petrushka, nonchalant in the missteps of the Tango or coolly detached in the chorale from Symphonies of Wind Instruments, Shevchenko’s pianism reflects the nuances of Stravinsky’s varying approaches, captured in wonderfully lucid, vibrant sound by Delphian. If there is a slight caveat, it is Shevchenko’s control of tempo. Given its virtuosic