Another Historic Disc by Thomson!
Peter D. Klein | University of North Dakota | 03/13/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Philip Thomson, who is a graduate of Juilliard, winner of their Franz Liszt Piano Concerto Competition, studied with Swiss legend Pierre Souvairan and then with the inimitable and incredible Abbey Simon, two of the top 10 pianists of the 20th Century, is a credit to his teachers and emulates their masterful and emotional performances with his own unique blend of technical mastery and emotional wizardry. He is a Lizst specialist who becomes one with the insturment, they are an inseperable unit, and the mesmerizing energy experienced when witnessing his live performance is lessened, but not in any real sense lost in his recordings.
Thomson discovered these lost treasures of Blumenfeld, who was the teacher of the famed pianist Vladimar Horowitz and Simon Barere. These works resurfaced after 100 years lost and their is no better performer to breath life back into them than Thomson, who has been compared by reviewers to the legendary Lhevine, Hoffman and Friedman. The performances are technically perfect, emotionally riveting and the music is Chopinesque and the epitome of romantic beauty and finesse.
Enjoy one of the best kept secrets of the pianistic world. I urge you to Listen to all of Thomson's recordings on Ivory Classics, Naxos and Hungaroton."
An amazing repertoire discovery
Rick Robertson | Roanoke, Alabama, USA | 06/10/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"If you are a performing pianist, or an amateur of above-average attainments looking for something new to stick in your piano bench, the music of Felix Blumenfeld is waiting for you. And until you find the scores, (Musica Obscura publishes the main ones, and pdf files are all over the Internet) it is absolutely IMPERATIVE that you seek out and buy this CD.
It would be a moot point to quibble about Philip Thomson's most capable playing, as this is a "world premiere" recording, and therefore unavailable anywhere else. At least until Naxos jumps on the Blumenfeld bandwagon. (And as I look into my crystal ball I see a lesser pianist struggling with newly learned music and without the sumptuous sound provided here. So that should resolve that issue.) Some have complained about the sound of certain Ivory Classics releases; this one does not have the muddy sound of some issues. Beautiful recorded sound, displaying Thomson's ample tonal palette to advantage.
Felix Blumenfeld (1863-1931, Russia) is known to most pianists for two reasons: he was the teacher of Vladimir Horowitz, and he wrote one of the very few pieces for left hand alone that is attempted by pianists with the use of both. That Etude is not on this CD, but no fear. One who seeks can find Simon Barere and Leon Fleisher in that piece.
Like Chopin, Scriabin, Rachmaninoff, Stephen Heller, and god knows who else, Blumenfeld wrote a set of preludes in all the major and minor keys. This set, op. 17, is reminiscent of Scriabin's op. 11 set, but on a much larger scale (printed score runs to over 80 pages) and more difficult technically. If one glances at the score, or gives a listen to, the first prelude in C major, one may be tempted to stop there. It is probably the "least original" of the entire set. If you are bored, skip this track. You won't be sorry. These seem to bridge the gap between Scriabin and Rachmaninoff, and a performing pianist will soon be choosing favorites to form a recital group.
I simply cannot recommend this disc too highly. Find it and buy it, period. If late nineteenth-century Russian piano music intrigues you, you NEED this CD.
Rick Robertson
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