MUSIC OF A BYGONE ERA

Jed Distler

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

Frank Glazer’s rich and varied musical life as touring virtuoso, teacher, music director, television host, annotator, and much else is enough for five careers. The 91-year-old pianist’s long resume includes everything from studies with Schnabel and Schoenberg to playing in vaudeville houses and, believe it or not, the Icelandic premiere of Brahms’ second piano concerto. At 85, he recorded a recital of once-fashionable/now-frowned-upon encores, the type of repertoire Arthur Loesser used to call “cream of corn”. Few pianists today have a genuine feeling for such pieces, save, of course, Earl Wild (Glazer’s slightly younger contemporary) and perhaps Stephen Hough or Marc-André Hamelin. However, Glazer’s beautiful, robust tone and innate charm are exactly what this music needs.

The disc opens with a curvaceous and ravishingly sung out account of Mendelssohn’s Spring Song, followed by Alfred Grünfeld’s pretty if overlong Romanze and Grieg’s Papillon, which is fuller in body and less cameo-like than we often hear. Glazer pays heed to the inner voices in Godowsky’s Alt-Wien, although it doesn’t quite attain the tonal magic of Shura Cherkassky’s recently reissued 1974 recording. Although Sinding’s Rustle of Spring, Moszkowski’s E major Waltz, and Rubinstein’s Melody in F would benefit from a lighter touch and more rippling accompanimental figures, Glazer’s legato scales and subtle tonal shadings–using remarkably little pedal–in Liadov’s Musical Snuff-Box are worthy of the old Hofmann and Rosenthal recordings.

Rubinstein’s Kamennoi-Ostrow moves too slowly to sustain the music’s bland harmonic appeal, while Paderewski’s Menuet in G and Macdowell’s Witches Dance are a shade heavy-handed and lacking in élan. Glazer accommodates the prevalent thick textures of Dohnanyi’s “Nalia” transcription by taking overly slow tempos, yet the pianist’s sustaining power prevents them from sounding labored. On the other hand, Glazer’s fingers sound 60 years younger in Stephen Heller’s fluffy transcription of Schubert’s “The Trout”, while Liszt’s Third Liebestraume is direct, elegant, and free of treacle. All told, a lovely disc.


Recording Details:

Album Title: MUSIC OF A BYGONE ERA
Reference Recording: None for this collection

Works for Solo Piano by various composers, including Mendelssohn, Godowski, Rubinstein, Grieg, Moszkowski, Liszt, others -

    Soloists: Frank Glazer (piano)

  • Record Label: Bridge - 9194
  • Medium: CD

Search Music Reviews

Search Sponsor

  • Insider Reviews only
  • Click here for Search Tips

Visit Our Merchandise Store

Visit Store
  • Benjamin Bernheim Rules as Met’s Hoffmann
    Benjamin Bernheim Rules as Met’s Hoffmann Metropolitan Opera House, Lincoln Center, NY; Oct 24, 2024 Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann is a nasty work. Despite its
  • RIP David Vernier, Editor-in-Chief
    David Vernier, ClassicsToday.com’s founding Editor-in-Chief passed away Thursday morning, August 1, 2024 after a long battle with cancer. The end came shockingly quickly. Just a
  • Finally, It’s SIR John
    He’d received many honors before, but it wasn’t until last week that John Rutter, best known for his choral compositions and arrangements, especially works related