I investigated Beatrice
Rana, a new Italian piano “star” (on a CD with Antonio
Pappano and the Santa Cecilia Orchestra in Rome). She is presented by
the Warner company as a keyboard tiger, with the orchestra well
in the background. The background orchestra does not matter too much
in Prokofiev's second piano concerto, which must rival Chopin's piano
concertos as one of the least rewarding for an orchestral player.
Listening to the Prokofiev second piano concerto, I realised I have
never really taken to Prokofiev's music; slick, clever, fashionable
but, a bit like Stravinsky, lacking that Russian “soul” one finds
in Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov or Shostakovich.
Like her ancient
pianistic ancestor, Vladimir Horowitz, Ms Rana can certainly play the
piano and, with the up-front Warner recording, we hear every
demi-semiquaver she plays. The orchestra is less fortunate and comes
over, in so far as the recording engineers are concerned, as a
necessary back-up group. There are four photos of the photogenic Ms
Rana, and we are in the world of showbiz rather than serious music
making. I followed Ms Rana's CD with Yuja Wang playing the
Ravel piano concertos with the Zürich Tonhalle orchestra conducted
by Lionel Bringuier. Ms Wang is also a star (at the moment, even
bigger in the galaxy than Ms Rana) but, with Yuja, we are back in the
land of music making rather than circus tricks. I am not a
great fan of Ravel, nor of his piano concertos. However, I can
recognise great performances when I hear them, and the constant
dialogue between Yuja Wang and the Swiss orchestra is a welcome
antidote to the “pianist plus one” recording by Beatrice Rana.
It's not often that the sweeping Tchaikovskian melodies in his first
piano concerto go for practically nothing; here they are just an
interlude before Ms Rana thunders in again. The Italian recording
engineers should be shown the door. And Ms Rana, incredible pianist
though she may be, does not go on my “buy” list.
The CD of Yuja Wang
playing the two Ravel piano concertos is in a demonstration class of
how piano and orchestra should play together in a piano concerto, and
how they should be balanced (DG). Yuja's opening of the second
movement of the Ravel G major concerto will melt any heart. I am
afraid, however, that Beatrice Rana's CD of Prokofiev's second
piano, coupled with Tchaikovsky's first, is a demonstration of how
not to do it. Antonio Pappano will probably put this CD at the
bottom of his bottom draw. I just hope that Warner does not follow
this with a duo recording featuring Ms Rana and Andrea Bocelli. Or
a duo recording with Ms Rana and Lang Lang.
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