| Review |
APRIL 2003 -
The last pianist to conquer the Everest of Gaspard was Naida Cole in a mixed recital of French music, and if it's technical perfection you prize, she is actually more precise, less Impressionistic, than Martha Argerich. Himy is less cleanly recorded than Cole but the pianist is wonderfully stylish, and particularly good at filigree, melting sonorities and all those shadowy, spooky bits in 'Scarbo' - just listen to his disappearing act at the end. As for the Miroirs, I have never
heard the five pieces done better. The echo effects in 'Oiseaux tristes' are
what you dream of, and the liquid quality of 'Une barque sur l'océan'
invites you to listen over and over again. Even the passages of the single-line
melody in 'Alborada' have an indescribably exotic atmosphere in Himy's subtle
moulding. 'La vallée des cloches' again remarkable for the control of
echo effects, is both haunting and sad. Instead of Ravel's own transcription of
La Valse, Himy offers his own - a dazzling piece of work which sounds
impossible for two hands to manage. His do so without evident strain, though
oddly enough the atmospheric misty bits and swirls come off better than the
leaner, more explicit dance music, which, surely, could have more bounce.
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