Rhapsody On A Theme Of Paganini
Piano Rhapsodies Of Love
George Greeley - His Piano and Orchestra
R-6092
From the back cover: Although the word "rhapsody" can be traced to Homer, it has been a popular label only since the nineteenth century, only indeed since Liszt. It was he, with his Hungarian Rhapsodies, who turned the term for a mere fragment into the definition of a richly set medley. And a piano rhapsody, in particular, has since his time always evoked the image of a master at the keyboard: a man of classi- cal training and virtuosity, a man with personal style. Such is certainly the description of George Greeley. Educated at Columbia University, the University of Southern California, and the Juilliard School of Music, Greeley also took private instruction under Ernst Toch in California. It is to Toch especially he feels most indebted for his knowledge of form and his attitude toward composition. When it comes to playing the music of other composers, Greeley says, "I try never to violate the composer's intention." With regard to Ravel's Pavane pour une infante defunte, for example, which has been popularized as "The Lamp Is Low," Greeley returned to Ravel's original piano score, published in 1899. Ravel himself had orchestrated the piece nine years later, and Greeley was also influenced by that treatment in the coloration of his own. "The tune always dictates the style of the arrangement. In Rachmaninoff's 18th Variation on a Theme of Paganini and in Debussy's Clair de lune I merely orchestrated the piano part. And what I play on the piano is exactly what was published." When a classical theme is widely known as a popular song, however, Greeley feels at liberty to make whatever modifications he wants. And both of the Chopin works here are his own recensions. Sometimes he blends both the old and the new to give an old standard brand-new excitement. The traditional air "Greensleeves" has once again received a traditional orchestral setting, with the suggestion of Elizabethan lutes and hautboys. But the tempo is hardly traditional: strictly measured, slightly up-tempo, it creates an amusing picture of minstrels who march, not wander, through jolly Old England. "Mardi Gras," the concluding section to Ferde Grofé's Mississippi Suite, begins with Greeley retaining Grofé's syncopated rhythms of the Twenties. But then there is a transition to a contemporary tempo and Greeley's distinctive phrasing. Grofé has always called "Mardi Gras" his favorite work, and he should certainly favor this arrangement.
How to handle the melodic line in performance is a matter that perplexes every musician. Gide frequently fretted about it in his journals and finally concluded he wanted it "deeply embedded in the friendly atmosphere created by the other voices, which evoke a constantly shimmering immaterial landscape." George Greeley defines the problem differently. Originally a rhapsody was a song; therefore the problem is to treat the piano as though it too could breathe and sing. When a song has a lyric, Greeley says "I read the lyric and play the tune as though it were singing. I impose the tune loosely on the orchestra." It is this melodic interpretation, this holding-back in the rhythmic phrasing, which keeps the image of the pianist always before one as he listens to a Greeley record. The virtuosity of the man never escapes us.
Nor do his energy and versatility. For the 1963-64 TV season he is writing and conducting the music for a CBS Sunday night series, "My Favorite Martian." It means scoring a new show every six days for a minimum of twenty-six weeks. During the same months he will also give a series of ten concerts on the West Coast. And, hopefully, he will be thinking about another album. He has cut twelve LPs in the past five years. This is his first on Reprise, the first of a new series. And it's a great beginning. –LAWRENCE D. STEWART
Smile (Theme from "Modern Times")
The Lamp Is Low (Pavane)
Blue Star (The Medic Theme)
Clair De Lune
The Dream Of Olwen
Rhapsody On A Theme Of Paganini (18th Variation, Opus 43)
Mardi Gras (Mississippi Suite)
My Reverie (Debussy's Reverie)
No Other Love (Chopin's Etude In A Major)
Greensleeves
Chopin's Nocturne in E Flat