An exciting new release of American Piano Sonatas from SOMM to remind us of 20th-century America’s achievements in music as in so much else. SOMM’s new collaboration with pianist Nathan Williamson who has been steeped in American music since his years as a student of piano and composition at Yale has produced an exhilarating disc brimming with dynamism and energy.
The disc includes sonatas by four very different American composers writing under very different circumstances: Leonard Bernstein, a charismatic, ambitious all-round musician in his student years; Aaron Copland, an established master at the height of his powers; Lou Harrison, an inveterate experimentalist setting himself a new problem; and Charles Ives, a dogged individualist insisting on his own way of doing things. In each case, the composer chose not to fit his music into conventional forms, but to rethink the whole idea of the sonata. America is after all the land of the clean sheet, the fresh start – of making things fresh, exciting and new.
Nathan, who leads a diverse and varied career as pianist, composer and artistic director studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama with Joan Havill and Malcolm Singer, at Oxford University with Robert Saxton, and at Yale with Martin Bresnick and Joan Panetti and American composer Ezra Laderman Dean of the Yale School of Music and President of American Academy of Arts and Letters, who died last year at the age of 90. Nathan has dedicated this recording to Laderman as a tribute to a great teacher whose far-reaching influence has inspired him to study the work of American composers in great depth.
“There are few recordings of these works that equal this. The artist’s technique and pianistic command allow him an ideal musical freedom. The effect is of intense commitment and an ultimate sense of poetry.” - Bryce Morrison of Williamson’s debut solo disc Brahms & Schubert: Late Piano Works, released in 2013.
‘Williamson’s approach is visionary and romantic. But in this he is never crude, mannered or artificial. Rather one senses he has looked deep inside these works and explored their complex interior with thoughtful contemplation as well as love and empathy.’ – Donald Sturrock
On This Recording
- Piano Sonata: I. Molto moderato
- Piano Sonata: II. Vivace
- Piano Sonata: III. Andante sostenuto
- Piano Sonata: I. —
- Piano Sonata: II. —
- Piano Sonata No. 3: I. Slowish and Singing
- Piano Sonata No. 3: II. Fast and Rugged
- Piano Sonata No. 3: III. Very slow, very singing and solemn
- Largo ostinato
- 3-Page Sonata
- The Celestial Railroad