Busoni: Music for 2 Pianos
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Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924) Music for Two Pianos Ferruccio Busoni was universally regarded as one of the late-Romantic era's most remarkable piano...
Ferruccio Busoni (1866-1924)
Music for Two Pianos
Ferruccio Busoni was universally regarded as one of the
late-Romantic era's most remarkable piano virtuosi, and
was undoubtedly one of its most fascinating composers,
even if the searching intellectualism of much of his
music only slowly won it an audience. Despite a selfconscious
quest for compositional originality, Busoni
had a keen awareness of the greatness of the Western
musical tradition, and his engagement with the music of
Bach not only produced some of the finest arrangements
of that composer's music for piano, but also stimulated
Busoni's own creative imagination in many other ways.
As a writer too, he was both thought-provoking and
influential. Essays such as Sketch of a New Aesthetic of
Music (1907) not only helped to define his own creative
approach, but also laid down a philosophical challenge
to his contemporaries. Given his penchant for verbal
self-analysis, it is perhaps not surprising that the
contents of this disc of his works for two pianos were
effectively suggested by the composer himself. All the
pieces are based on works by Mozart or Bach, with
varying infusions of Busoni himself, ranging from
modest alterations in the former to the creation of
completely new compositions in the latter.
On finishing the arrangement of Mozart's
surprisingly stern and weighty Fantasie für eine
Orgelwalze, K.608, (Fantasy for a Barrel-Organ), in
1922, Busoni recommended that it could be included as
a specific part of a larger programme of his two-piano
works. Although the Fantasy is effectively an overture
in the Italian style, consisting of fast-slow-fast sections,
Busoni believed that it should, along with the
deliciously sprightly finale of Mozart's Piano Concerto
in F major, K.459, which he had already arranged for
two pianos under the title Duettino Concertante, form
the central section of a larger and rather unorthodox
'sonata'. The first movement of this sonata would be his
Improvisation on the Bach Chorale 'Wie wohl ist mir, o
Freund der Seele', completed in 1916. This piece is
based upon a set of variations that Busoni had originally
composed as the last movement of his second violin
sonata in 1900. As he himself explained in a preface to
the work, it had long been his intention to arrange the
movement for two pianos, but when he finally came to
the task his changed feelings about the music after
sixteen years, and the new possibilities and restrictions
created by replacing the violin part with one for a
second piano resulted in a virtually independent
composition, and one that reflected the increasing desire
for clarity in his compositional approach.
As the final movement of this notional sonata,
Busoni proposed the two-piano version of his
magisterial Fantasia Contrappuntistica, no doubt
thinking of the vast contrapuntal finale of Beethoven's
'Hammerklavier' Sonata, Op.106. The Fantasia
Contrappuntistica is Busoni's most ambitious and
hermetic piano work, and as a result tends to dwarf the
pieces preceding it, despite its obvious connections with
the 'Improvisation' first movement, for it too is based
on Bach, and also originally appeared in another format.
Busoni had long been fascinated with Bach's last,
unfinished, masterpiece The Art of Fugue, and in 1910,
while sailing to America on board the steamer
'Barbarossa', began a completion of the final,
fragmentary fugue, which he eventually finished in New
Orleans, in the midst of an American concert-tour. His
intention was not to imitate Bach's own style, but rather
to complete the piece using the technique of
symmetrically invertible counterpoint developed by his
friend the theorist Bernhard Ziehn. This allowed the
combination of contrapuntal lines without harmonic
restriction, and the resulting often dissonant sound is
very unlike Bach's carefully-crafted harmoniccontrapuntal
idiom. The work, now titled Grosse Fuge,
was printed in a limited edition of a hundred copies,
with a frontispiece depicting a very un-Barbarossa-like
galleon with five sails enclosed within a decagon,
Busoni's emblem for the form of the piece, which
presented five contrapuntal subjects over ten sections.
Soon after finishing the fugue, however, the
composer had the idea of lengthening it by including as
a prelude a set of chorale variations on 'Allein Gott in
der Hoh' sei Ehr'' ('Honour be to God alone on high'),
and this extended version was published later in 1910 as
Fantasia Contrappuntistica, Edizione definitiva for solo
piano. The form now comprised twelve sections:
1. Chorale-Variations 2. Fuga I 3. Fuga II 4. Fuga III
5. Intermezzo 6. Variatio I 7. Variatio II 8. Variatio III
9. Cadenza 10. Fuga IV 11. Chorale 12. Stretta.
Two years later a slightly simplified reworking was
published as an Edizione minore, also for solo piano, but
including a new introduction, a revision of his third
Elegy for piano, based on the Chorale-Prelude 'Meine
Seele bangt und hofft zu Dir' ('My soul fears and trusts
in Thee').
Busoni was nevertheless still not finished with what
he had come to see as his masterwork for piano. On
publishing his edition of Bach in 1920 he included both
the Edizione definitiva and Edizione minore of the
Fantasia Contrappuntistica, making the former even
more definitive (or less, according to your point of
view) by revising the last two pages for pianistic
reasons. The idea of making yet another version, this
time for two pianos, was also appealing ever more
strongly, as the composer had come to realise that the
Fantasia was 'a disproportionate task for ten fingers,
whereas divided between twenty it would be easy and
transparent for player and listener alike'. In 1921 he
brought this idea to fruition, but what he produced,
although based on the Edizione definitiva, and following
the ground-plan detailed above, also represents
something of an amalgamation of the two editions, with
a new introduction using both choral preludes, and a
new pictorial frontispiece representing the form of the
work, this time based not on a galleon, but on the west
entrance of the Palace of the Popes at Avignon. This
version is indubitably the most satisfying and directly
comprehensible of all, even for the vast majority of
listeners who have no knowledge of the architecture of
Papal palaces, for the writing for two pianos produces
an admirable lucidity and balance in the part-writing
that allows Busoni's cerebral, yet surprisingly thrilling,
counterpoint to stand out in full relief.
Dr Kenneth Hamilton
Fantasia contrappuntistica (version for 2 pianos) (more info)
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Fantasia Contrappuntistica - 27:40:00
Improvisation uber Bachs Chorallied Wie wohl ist mir (more info)
-
Improvisation on the Bach Chorale Wie wohl ist mir, o Freund der Seele (BWV 517) - 14:41
Fantasy in F minor, K. 608 (arr. F. Busoni) (more info)
-
Fantasie fur eine Orgelwalze (Fantasy for a Barrel-Organ), K. 608 - 8:19
Duettino concertante nach dem Finale von Mozarts Klavierkonzert K. 459 (more info)
-
Duettino Concertante after the Finale of Mozart's Piano Concerto (K. 459) - 7:23