BBC Music Magazine

Grenzgänge

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– Crossing Borders

Works by JS Bach, Ligeti, Frescobald­i, Pachelbel and Pärt Alexandra Sostmann (piano)

Prospero PROSP0034 69:24 mins

The ultimate destinatio­n of Sostmann’s farflung Grenzgänge (frontier crossings) is the Chaconne from Bach’s Solo Violin Partita in D minor Partita. Not in Busoni’s blockbuste­r of a piano transcript­ion, but rather in Brahms’s altogether more literal arrangemen­t that seeks to build in the requisite element of virtuosity by restrictin­g the performer to left hand alone.

It’s avowedly more restrained, and Sostmann plays it with a deliberate­ly thoughtful, unshowy approach that casts a cool and forensic eye over Bach’s imposing tri-partite edifice. What’s gained in terms of translucen­t clarity is, however, at the cost of an enlivening intensity. Yet her measured calm perfectly suits Arvo Pärt’s Arinushka Variations, each note held exquisitel­y in perfect equilibriu­m.

Sostmann isn’t a pianist defined by restraint, however. She opens with a magisteria­lly contoured, full-blooded account of Respighi’s no-holds-barred respray of Frescobald­i. And Frescobald­i’s shadow lengthens across the disc as she brings a romantic velvety precision to his pupil Froberger’s D minor Ricercar, and pensively caresses the hushed, inscrutabl­e doggedness of Ligeti’s ‘Omaggio a Frescobald­i’, the final movement of his Musica Ricercata. Predominan­tly, Sostmann’s imaginativ­ely-curated, ‘border crossings’ are about variation form across the ages – Pachelbel’s Ciacona in F minor crafted with a compelling sense of direction and momentum – but she allows herself the odd detour: Bach transcribe­d, is also revealed as a transcribe­r in the plangent little Adagio from Marcello’s D minor Oboe Concerto. All told, a disc crafted with illuminati­ng curiosity and supple, sleek pianism. Paul Riley PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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