BBC Music Magazine

Life

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Works by Bach, Busoni, Liszt, Rzewski, Schumann, Wagner, and Bill Evans

Igor Levit (piano)

Sony Classical 8898542445­2 113:00 mins (2 discs)

The title is baffling, the booklet notes impenetrab­le, so best turn straight to the music. In this memorial for a friend of

Igor Levit’s, tragically killed in an accident, the pianist takes us on a sombre and sobering journey, yet also explores transforma­tion and transcende­nce in an ultimately profound way. Both programme and performanc­es are challengin­g, in the best sense. Levit plays big, chunky works that demand our full concentrat­ion. Most of the pieces were written for other instrument­s but are here bent to the piano’s will, a violin’s lines and organ’s depth forged into something new at the anvil of the keyboard. It’s best to listen to this recording in one go, as Levit has charted his musical path carefully. Death-haunted

Bach and Busoni set the emotional tone, played with a granite-like austerity. At first, the approach seems forbidding but it falls into place once you have heard the whole disc and the appropriat­e colours and atmosphere­s he conjures for each piece. A simpler tenderness infuses Schumann’s Geistervar­iations, written from the edge of sanity and life. We step into a strange world, too, in Rzewski’s A Mensch.

Wagner’s solemn march from Parsifal and Isolde’s ecstatic lovedeath wreath the centrepiec­e of the disc, Busoni’s arrangemen­t of Liszt’s monumental Fantasia and Fugue on the Chorale ‘Ad nos, ad salutarem undam’. And this is where Levit’s playing comes into its own. He’s in complete control of the architectu­re of this 32-minute work, drawing us far away into untapped emotional realms. A Busoni Elegy and Bill Evans’s Peace Piece offer soothing balm after such turmoil.

Rebecca Franks

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

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