1983年、ウクライナ生まれの若き才能、ソニーよりデビュー!
タワーレコード(2009/04/08)
There's no question about pianist Kateryna Titova's technique in her debut recital, and a good thing, too, since the program consists entirely of works by Rachmaninov, the composer of some of the most transcendentally difficult piano music of the fin de siecle. But no matter what the Russian composer asks for -- be it the tumults of notes that open the Allegro agitato of his Second Piano Sonata, the ethereal ostinatos that start the Prelude in G minor, the monumental sonorities that fill the Prelude in C sharp minor, or the feathery arabesques that saturate the composer's transcription of Rimsky-Korsakov's Flight of the Bumblebee -- the young Ukrainian-born, German-based pianist nails them all. If that were all Titova brought to this music, it would be remarkable but not unusual; there are many pianists out there who could do the same.
But technique is not all Titova brings to the music; she also brings clarity and an effable sense of poetry. Many other pianists can play all the notes in the Second Sonata, but few can elucidate its gnarly textures like Titova. Similarly, many other pianists can hammer all the sonorities in the C sharp minor Prelude, but few can illuminate its harmonic progression like Titova. Better yet, the young pianist is not caught up in the game of ''my Rachmaninov is more emotionally excessive than your Rachmaninov." While there is no lack of expressivity in her Elegie in E flat minor or her Prelude in D major, Titova never seems to force the music to wear its heart on its sleeve, but rather allows it to naturally reveal itself. Though some might miss the emotionally extravagant Rachmaninov of Ashkenazy and Richter, others will embrace Titova's more lyrical Rachmaninov as a welcome alternative to the usual late-Romantic Sturm und Drang. Recorded in the venerable Jesus-Christus-Kirche in Berlin, Sony's sound here is rich, deep, warm, and amazingly transparent.
Rovi