Music Review: Domenico Scarlatti - Complete Keyboard Sonatas, Vol. 1

For its inaugural release of The Complete Keyboard Sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti, Naxos chose Tbilisi-native Eteri Andjaparidze. Russian pianists were among the first artists to champion the cause of Scarlatti sonatas performed on piano. Andjaparidze continues in the tradition of Horowitz, Pletnev, and Demidenko who are among the better known Russians who favor Scarlatti for performance. Andjaparidze continues this honor to the Italian composer with a precise and respectful recital of a collection of sonatas concentrating on the latter third of the corpus.

In common with Horowitz, as that Russian serves well as a comparison, Andjaparidze covers Sonatas in F Minor, K. 184 and E Major, K. 531. In Andjaparidze shares Horowitz’s vibrancy without his eccentricities. Her playing is fluid and carefully measured. On the E Major sonata, Andjaparidze affects a softer touch in the left hand than Horowitz (an understatement, to be sure). Where Horowitz is metronomic, tossing grenades in the lower register, Andjaparidze dances even handedly across Scarlatti’s pastoral landscape.

Highlights of the remainder of the disc include the opening C Major sonata, K. 487, which Andjaparidze asserts with command and attention. Also outstanding is her performance of minor key sonatas in G Minor, K. 450 and D Minor, K. 434. The G Minor sonata illustrates the cusp of the minor key as it connects Baroque to Classical, looking forward to Mozart and his more romantically inclined minor key piano works. The D Minor sonata is a study in aching gentleness, a work of empathy with loss. The centerpiece of the collection is the Sonata in E Minor, K. 402, one of the lengthiest of Scarlatti’s sonatas; Andjaparidze summons all of her talent into this carefully paced, emotional composition. This is Scarlatti’s minor key universe. Also covered by Andras Schiff respectfully, Andjaparidze takes her expert time in spinning out this masterpiece, making this fine collection worth owning for the E minor sonata alone.

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Article Author: C. Michael Bailey

Arkansas Son C. Michael Bailey has been writing about music and literature for 25 years. He is a Senior Contributor for All About Jazz and publisher of the webblog Mercury and Moonshine.... Michael’s day job is spent as a pharmacist/clinical data …

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