It may seem unlikely that Nikolai Roslavets would have consciously composed works in imitation of
Alexander Scriabin, so that both composers would have pieces that could be matched up, title for title, as they are on this album by pianist
Anya Alexeyev. But once one hears the music, the influence of
Scriabin is obvious and omnipresent, so such a gesture on Roslavets' part as naming and numbering his pieces after
Scriabin's doesn't seem farfetched. Roslavets' Two Poems, Five Preludes, and Three Etudes correspond to the identically named
Scriabin works, which are paired here, and even the two piano sonatas have a superficial resemblance in their two-movement formats. But beyond the uncanniness of the pairings, the connections in the music can be explained easily, for Roslavets adopted many of
Scriabin's techniques, most notably the use of the "synthetic chord" or a central complex harmony used as source material for an entire composition, in the manner of
Scriabin's Prometheus, Poem of Fire. Furthermore, Roslavets would have regarded
Scriabin as the most progressive mind in Russian music of his day, perhaps as innovative as
Schoenberg was in Austria, so he obviously derived his methodology and sound from his predecessor. Because the hot-house, perfumed style of both composers creates a dreamlike blur, it's easy to confuse their pieces here, and unless one pays strict attention to the track listing, the beginnings and endings of pieces can seem indistinct.
Alexeyev is skilled and expressively adept in this genre of piano music, and she plays with great energy and passion, though her languorous style of performance lends a similarity of mood to the pieces, which makes it even more likely that listeners will draw the intended parallels between
Scriabin and Roslavets. Marquis' sound is enjoyable for its clarity and resonance, and the ambience of the room lends an appropriate aural halo to the piano.