Nowadays, we tend to look askance at “salon music” as a
sort of shallow, lowbrow attraction for little old ladies at their afternoon
tea. But throughout most of the nineteenth century, back when people didn’t
have radios, television, Internet, CD’s, DVD’s, BD’s, or any other D’s at their
disposal, they listened to music the old-fashioned way--live. And that meant
listening to it in a theater, concert hall, or church for big orchestral or
choral works or a living room or drawing room, a “salon,” for many chamber and
solo works. The latter, understandably, became a more economical proposition.
For example, Chopin and Liszt were but two of the illustrious pianist/composers
who found performing in the intimate setting of the salon attractive.
The present disc offers twenty “salon” selections from
four Mexican pianists/composers, exquisitely performed by the celebrated
international pianist Jorge Federico Osorio. The music runs high to waltzes and
other dances, rhapsodic and melodic.
The program begins with the Caprice Vals, Op. 1, by Ricardo Castro (1864-1907). It’s a
beautiful, gently flowing waltz that a Viennese composer could as easily have
written. Osorio provides a delicate touch and a lightly exaggerated lilt that
gives a delightful animation and warmth to the piece. It’s gorgeous. In
addition, we get six other pieces by Castro, all of them in a similar vein.
The next composer is Filipe Villanueva (1862-1893),
represented first by his Suena
Dorado: Mazurka. There is genuine
grace and charm here in a genteel but lively setting. Again, Osorio shows us
how a performer can conjure up music that is sweet, refined, and lyrical yet
powerful and concentrated at the same time. This is more than mere lightweight
entertainment; it’s art. Further down on the program, we get five more such
pieces from Villaneueva.
Manuel M. Ponce (1882-1948) follows, the most-recent
composer of the lot, with his 8th Mazurca
de Salon. The pieces by Ponce, of which there are four, sound like the most
seriously “classical” art music on the program. They haven’t got quite the
popular appeal of some of the other works on the disc, but they can impart a
more lasting impression. As before, Osorio is expressive, nuanced, and singing
in his piano playing.
The final piece is the only work on the disc from Jose
Rolon (1876-1945), a contemporary of Ponce.
Rolon dedicated his Vals Capricho,
Op. 14, to pianist Arthur Rubinstein. Its variations on the familiar tune “Over
the Waves” by Mexican composer Juventino Rosas takes flight in a most virtuosic
manner and closes the show in high style.
The titles of most of the pieces say it all: sentimental,
melancholic, romantic, and poetic. The result is music both soothing and
stimulating. Add Osorio’s pianistic command, and it seems to me a winning
combination.
This is a recording from audio engineer Bill Maylone, so
you know it’s going to be good. Cedille recorded the program in 2012 in the Fay
and Daniel Levin Performance Studio of 98.7 WFMT, Chicago, Illinois. The sound
is of the reach-out-and-touch-it kind, where if you close your eyes, there is a
piano in the room with you. The sonics are clear and clean, miked at a
moderately close distance, with strong impact and articulation. It’s one of the
best piano recordings you’re likely to hear.
JJP