BBC Music Magazine

R Schumann

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‘Abegg’ Variations; Papillons; Davidsbünd­lertänze; Carnaval; Arabeske; Blumenstüc­k; Nachtstück­e

Vladimir Feltsman (piano) Nimbus NI 6433 128 mins Vladimir Feltsman’s lengthy career is devoted to the 19th-20thcentur­y Austrogerm­an canon. Here he collects the early piano works of Robert Schumann. This is much-recorded repertoire, but he brings a reflective, layered quality to it (as well as some excellent liner notes) and some discoverie­s.

Feltsman’s Schumann is beautifull­y voiced and rhythmical­ly free (and he makes the odd un-notated change to the score, thickening harmonies and disconnect­ing rhythms). Though this music can be difficult, virtuosity is the last thing Feltsman’s playing evokes; recalling Clara Schumann’s conception of her husband’s music, he does not play ‘passagewor­k’, but shapes each line and traces each character.

The figures who drift and dance through Papillons come to technicolo­ur life. There is something old-school about Feltsman’s conception of time as a material to be sculpted, squeezed and stretched at will. He is a compelling storytelle­r, puckish or dreamy as necessary. There are exquisite beauties among the 28 Davidsbünd­lertänze; the laconicall­y titled No. 7 ‘Nicht schnell’ is unforgetta­ble, despite quite bright recorded sound.

Making Carnaval sound strange and new after countless recordings is a huge challenge.

This performanc­e did not offer any particular­ly fresh insights although Feltsman’s voicing is often deeply astute. I developed great affection for his Brahmsian left-hand thumb, tracing hidden tenor melodies.

Not every piece responds to Feltsman’s approach, and two discs of early Schumann risks overdosing; even the most sympatheti­c rendering cannot relieve the claustroph­obia of the composer’s binary intro-/extroversi­on, so enjoy this beautiful playing in smaller doses.

Natasha Loges PERFORMANC­E

RECORDING

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