Ewa Podleś and Garrick Ohlsson Live (Chopin, Rachmaninov, Scriabin, Mussorgsky) (2003) Ewa Podleś and Garrick Ohlsson, Chopin Songs (op. 74) (2000) Online scores: Chopin op. 74 Tchaikovsky -- op. 6, op. 47, op. 57 Scriabin -- Sonata No. 2, Poèmes op. 32, Etudes op. 42 |
Now in her 50s, Podleś is still singing with husky ferocity. She was well matched with Ohlsson, who played with the piano lid up and mostly at full bore, as in the booming postlude of the first song of their Tchaikovsky set, Does the Day Reign?. Podleś seemed no less authoritative in Russian, and the scope of her voice seemed to broaden with Was I Not a Little Blade of Grass, in which she brought to life a young woman married to an old man. The theme came back in Zemphira's Song, sung by a young wife who detests her husband and falls in love with a younger man, a sort of predecessor of Katarina Izmailova. The set also highlighted the singer's outrageous range, which stretches from fairly high for a contralto to shockingly low.
Anne Midgette, The Elemental Power of Ewa Podles (Washington Post, October 21) Tim Smith, Ewa Podles electrifies Shriver Hall (Clef Notes, October 20) |
Nothing could have prepared the listener, however, for the abject terror elicited by Podleś as the specter of death in her final set, Mussorgsky's Songs and Dances of Death. Here as throughout the recital, Ohlsson accompanied from memory, with his eyes almost always focused on his singer, allowing him to calibrate the folk-style accelerando in Trepak precisely to her pace, for example. As much as she may have overplayed some of Death's campier sides, strumming an air guitar during the Serenade, for example, the combination of the dark, earthen tone of her voice and the snarl of ruthless hate on her face were bone-chilling. Podleś was quite correct to decide that there could be no encore to follow such a thing.
The next concert at Shriver Hall will feature the soon-to-retire Guarneri String Quartet (November 2, 5:30 pm).
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