BOULEZ Complete Piano Music

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Pierre Boulez

Genre:

Instrumental

Label: Bridge

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 81

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: BRIDGE9456A/B

BRIDGE9456A/B. BOULEZ Complete Piano Music

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Sonata for Piano No. 2 Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
(12) Notations Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Incises Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Sonata for Piano No. 1 Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Une page d'éphéméride Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Sonata for Piano No. 3 Pierre Boulez, Composer
Marc Ponthus, Piano
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Pierre Boulez’s complete oeuvre for solo piano encompasses three piano sonatas (1946, 1948, 1957), a chain of miniatures grouped together as Douze Notations (1945) and two small occasional pieces, Incises (2001) and Une page d’ephéméride (2005). Marc Ponthus is the second pianist, following Dimitri Vassilakis’s 2012 set on Cybele, to have recorded all this music as a job lot.

The ghosts of Maurizio Pollini, Charles Rosen and Claude Helffer – if not necessarily Idil Biret on Naxos and DG’s Paavali Jumppanen – hang heavy, of course, and Vassilakis and Ponthus are representatives of a new generation of Boulez interpreters, alongside Pi-Hsien Chen, whose 2005 release on HatArt (the three sonatas and Notations only) remains giddyingly brilliant. Chen is broadly faithful to the music’s modernist idiom. There are moments during Vassilakis’s set when you feel a conscious (re-)positioning of the music towards embracing earlier traditions in French piano music; and, rather neatly, Ponthus pitches his aesthetic tent equidistant between these two approaches, his pianism engaging fully with what this music can do, rather than just what it is.

Chatter persists, including from those who should who better, that making a judgement about which recording of Boulez’s piano music to choose is a pointless task as only bat (or Boulez) ears could distinguish right notes from wrong. But Ponthus opens with the Second Sonata, immediately imposing character and definition on the music. His high-velocity vault through the opening movement – marked Extrêmement rapide – takes Boulez at his word, coming in a whole two minutes faster than Chen (5'22" against 7'39") and making even Pollini sound overly deliberate. But Ponthus doesn’t just have quicksilver fingers. The phrasing, the harmonic evolution and the music’s rhythmic inner engine spark into intelligent life; he voyages deep inside the music’s journey, the desolate and sparse weave of the second movement’s beginning feeling not only logical but musically necessary.

His unpicking of the Third Sonata’s modular structure corroborates my intuition that Ponthus has the Second Sonata’s four-movement construct entirely under his control. Subtle nuances of timbre and harmonic urgency stress that the Third Sonata is an unfolding and living structure that ought not solidify into a form. In comparison, Incises and Une page d’ephéméride resonate as pretty enough doodles; but the First Sonata and the kaleidoscopic Douze Notations feel suitably packed with variety and event. As a postscript, I’m duty bound to comment that Bridge’s hilariously terrible cover art might actively dissuade some potential punters – a recurring Achilles heel that this otherwise consistently excellent label urgently needs to address.

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