Home listening - a good week for keyboard wizards

The Guardian 0

Each in their own way, Martin James Bartlett and John Challenger pull out all the stops

• Still only 23 years old, the English pianist Martin James Bartlett won BBC Young Musician of the Year in 2014 and is now racing ahead with his international career. Love and Death (Warner) is his first recital disc: ambitious repertoire. thoughtfully and eloquently played, of subtly interlinking works by Liszt, Granados, Prokofiev and Bach (arranged by Busoni and Hess). It’s a mix of fairly familiar – Liszt’s Petrarch Sonnets, the Wagner/Liszt Liebestod from Tristan und Isolde – and less obvious. Granados’s voluptuous, almost improvisatory Goyescas No 5, El amor y la muerte, gives the disc both a title and a passionate centrepiece. The concluding work is the second of Prokofiev’s “war sonatas”, No 7 in B flat, Op 83, spiky, turbulent, impassioned. A striking debut.

• Organist John Challenger, assistant director of music at Salisbury Cathedral, is a youthful keyboard virtuoso of a different variety. Having already released a disc of Elgar, this latest is devoted to César Franck, played on Salisbury’s magnificent 1877 “Father” Henry Willis organ, and released on the cathedral’s own label. Renovations and modernisations aside, the instrument retains its original tonal colours, but one aim of this excellent disc is to raise funds for essential restoration. The booklet notes, quaintly, that “some wind leakage and action noise may be audible at times”, but you’d have to strain to notice.

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Sun Jul 21 07:00:03 GMT 2019