The South American nation of Venezuela has emerged as a source for pianistic talent, particularly given the prominence and popularity of pianist
Gabriela Montero. From the newly named Nimbus Alliance comes a disc from
Clara Rodriguez, whom by comparison is an already established name, recording for the Meridian and now-defunct ASV labels and serving as a professor of piano at the Royal College of Music in London. Nimbus Alliance's Clara Rodriguez Plays the Music of Teresa Carreño focuses on the compositional output of
Carreño, the great Venezuelan pianist of the nineteenth century who was one of the most powerful and popular women of her era. Apart for the one original work -- "Mì Teresita" -- which
Carreño recorded on her own as a piano roll, recordings of
Carreño's music are practically nonexistent, though pianist
Alexandra Oehler made a selection for the limited-edition Ars Musici label in 1999.
Rodriguez's playing throughout is disciplined, well-coordinated, thoughtful, and restrained, all qualities not easily associated with
Carreño herself until late career; earlier,
Carreño was noted for going for the jugular in her playing. However, what
Rodriguez does with the music is the right choice, because
Carreño's compositions are nowhere near as stormy, flashy, or demonstrative as she was; most are surprisingly straightforward and direct in content, even as some are driven by virtuosic devices almost invisible to the ear, yet a lot of work for the pianist. They take a little getting used to, as one of her teachers was Louis Moreau Gottschalk, whose influence can be heard in much of this music. To
Carreño, Gottschalk's The Last Hope would have been a groundbreaking masterwork and an inspirational model within a certain romantic milieu. It still is, but to post-twentieth century ears, The Last Hope's protracted emotional longuers and strings of meandering triplets bring to mind an idiom long seen as hopelessly outmoded.
Carreño's music is not wholly free of such influence; the long melody of her Ballade, Op. 15, is driven along by an upward arpeggio figure, and before that section is concluded, listeners might find themselves squirming in their seats.
However, most of the rest of it is quite enchanting. The majority of
Carreño's compositions date from her teen years, and she was a very good teen composer.
Carreño's waltz La corbeille de fleurs, Op. 9, written when she was around 11 years old, contains plenty of elements of surprise and is full of the spontaneity and ambition of youth, even if the edges aren't quite rounded off.
Carreño's Mazurka de Salon, Op. 30, is genuinely lovely and gently syncopated, and while we don't quite hear the part of
Carreño's late Vals gayo that "seems to draw from French Impressionism" as so indicated by
Rodriguez, what is clear is a deepening of
Carreño's idiom, perhaps assuming some of the mildly modern veneer of the music of her then-estranged husband,
Eugen d'Albert.
Carreño's piano compositions were intended as encore pieces and that is exactly what they are, yet they are not nearly as glittery, showy, and superficial as they could be. On the other hand,
Carreño's music is not as hardily romantic and personal as Clara Schumann's, nor is it as masterfully compressed and understated as Fanny Mendelssohn's nor as stylish and magisterial as that of
Chaminade. But it's still worthwhile, and Nimbus Alliance's Clara Rodriguez Plays the Music of Teresa Carreño gradually tends to grow on the listener, rewarding a bit more with each repeated play. Both
Rodriguez and Nimbus Alliance are to be congratulated for opening a window onto the personal creativity of this dynamic and highly interesting woman.