Bella Davidovich: The Philips Legacy | Australian Eloquence ELQ4844186

Bella Davidovich: The Philips Legacy

£45.55

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Label: Australian Eloquence

Cat No: ELQ4844186

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 8

Release Date: 23rd September 2022

Contents

About

The Philips recordings of Russian pianist Bella Davidovich, collected together for the first time on CD - includes recordings previously unreleased on CD.

"Why is everyone writing about me?" the pianist Lazar Berman once exclaimed "Why don't you write about Bella Davidovich? She's more interesting than me. She's superb!"

Born in 1928 in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, the musician acclaimed by Berman as Russia's "greatest female pianist" shared first prize in the 1949 Chopin Competition at Warsaw with Halina Czerny-Stefańska. Thereafter she was mostly confined to the Soviet Union until she was allowed to emigrate to the US in 1978. When she did so, the intensity of expectation surrounding her arrival and early appearances approached that given to Sviatoslav Richter in the late 1950s. Her debut recital at a sold-out Carnegie Hall evoked an atmosphere usually associated with Horowitz concerts.

"Russia's best-kept secret", shouted the advertisements for her first Philips recordings, but critics were quick to observe that Davidovich did not fit the popular stereotype of the broad-scaled romantic Russian pianist, overpowering the music at every turn. She brought a poetic approach to everything she played, and Philips recorded her in repertoire which played to her strengths, beginning with Swiss sessions in March 1979 of Beethoven sonatas, Schumann's Carnaval and Chopin's Preludes. More Chopin followed, including the concertos accompanied by Sir Neville Marriner – and then an album of Rachmaninov and Saint-Saëns at the Concertgebouw, where she had established a warm rapport with both the Dutch orchestra and audience some years before her emigration.

The recordings on this collection date from 1979 to 1983, and Davidovich's Philips discography came to an end with a recital of Scriabin and Prokofiev (including a superbly pointed selection of pieces from Romeo and Juliet), issued in 1985. Featuring original covers, the set is annotated with a new essay by the piano historian Mark Ainley partly based on conversations with Davidovich's son, the violinist Dmitri Sitkovetsky.

"Her records suggest the poised and significant manner of Clara Haskil, but in person she is a much more imperious, colourful and uninhibited sort of player."
– The Boston Globe

"Davidovich is one helluva strong player, but she is no show-off; everything is personal, phrased, articulated, sung out, intense, highly poetic. Hers is a superb Carnaval, full of fantasy and poetry." – Stereo Review, October 1980 (Schumann)

"That Davidovich has herself an ample zest for life is evident from the coursing finale of Op.31 No.3. PG Wodehouse's Aunt Dahlia, doyenne of the Quorn and Pytchley hunts, would have thrilled to so stirring a chase." – Gramophone, February 1981 (Beethoven)

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