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| Sharon Prushansky (Courtesy Jerusalem Baroque Orchestra) |
At the Eden-Tamir Music Center, Ein Kerem,
Jerusalem, on May 23rd 2026, Sharon Prushansky performed "Between
Classicism and Early Romanticism". Ms. Prushansky played a selection of
early 19th-century works on the center's recently-acquired 1819 Graf
fortepiano, an excellent instrument made by historic piano builder Paul McNulty
(US), based on pianos played by Beethoven, Schubert and Chopin.
The program opened with Ludwig van
Beethoven's Sonata No.15 in D major Op.28 "Pastoral". Although
from the beginning of the composer's so-called middle period, the sonata follows
the traditional fast-slow-scherzo-finale pattern. Addressing its easy-going and
genial character, Beethoven's Hamburg publisher gave the sonata the title of
"Pastoral", a soubriquet that becomes particularly clear in the final
movement (Rondo: Allegro ma non troppo.) From the opening movement (Allegro),
its "heartbeat" providing an air of mystery, Prushansky's
playing is stylistic, carefully shaped, tasteful and understated. Via the
direct sound world of the fortepiano, she reads into the score's fine detail, also pointing out Beethoven's small surprising turns. In the Andante, the sustained melody set over a staccato,
broken-chord bass (one of the work's idiomatic effects), she allows gentle
hesitations to shape the movement's course. Following the Scherzo, negotiated
with the wink of an eye, Prushansky’s playing of the final
movement, with its drone-like opening figure, emerges clean and vivid, indeed, suggestive of rustic charm.
In 1805, Irish poet Thomas Moore wrote a
short poem titled “The Last Rose of Summer” This was later set to a
traditional tune, the poem and the tune published in 1813 in Volume 5
of Moore’s Selection of Irish Melodies. Several composers have
created their own arrangements and fantasies based on the tune. How exactly
Felix Mendelssohn came across “The Last Rose of Summer” is unclear; he
composed a fantasia on that tune in 1827, published as Op.15. The melody is
presented in plain and unadorned Adagio passages contrasted by intense presto utterances. Prushansky makes a good case for the attractive and somewhat curious Last
Rose of Summer Fantasy.
Despite his short life, Friedrich Theodor
Fröhlich (1803-1836) is nevertheless regarded today as Switzerland’s most
significant early Romantic composer. He was also a brilliant pianist. Leaving behind over 700 compositions, Fröhlich's choral works and songs, all in the
Romantic vein, are impressive. He also composed two symphonies, overtures and much
chamber music, as well as piano pieces. Of the latter genre, Sharon Prushansky
performed 3 Elegien (Three Elegies) for solo piano from Op.15 (1833).
She gave rhapsodic expression to the pieces' pianistic, personal, highly
melodious and fetchingly Romantic moods, so suited to the congenial attributes
of the fortepiano. The second piece she played, (with the puzzling title of) Andante:
Nicht an Alexis (Not to Alexis), is characterized by the unusual
time signature of 5/8 (the first piece in history using the
signature of 5/8 throughout?). It is quirky and quite lovely. Altogether, this was
a fine opportunity to hear music of the mostly-forgotten composer.
Frédéric Chopin composed mazurkas virtually
throughout his life. Boasting nearly 60 of them, these miniatures form a pivotal
body of the composer's most personal musical utterances, a constant reminder of
the cultural ties he held to his native Poland, as well as of the memory he
retained of the mentality of his people. The Jerusalem recital included
three of Chopin's early mazurkas. Playing Mazurka in F minor Op.7 No.3, its
pianissimo opening suggesting bagpipes, then the much-loved hearty,
jauntily dancing Mazurka in B-flat major, to the Mazurka in C-sharp minor Op.6
No.2, the latter’s rustic atmosphere introduced by the contrarily accentuated
fifths drone in the bass, Prushansky addresses the unique character of each
(including curious, deviant motifs appearing in several of the mazurkas), freely shaping
and flexing gestures, presenting the wealth of melodic invention and of
harmonic-, rhythmic- and expressive nuances of each dance with spontaneity.
As part of the broad musical education
given to her by her father, Clara Wieck learned to compose. From childhood to
middle age, she produced a considerable body of works. Her six Soirées
musicales Op.6 (1835-1836), written at age 16 or 17, remain one of
her most notable works in the solo piano repertoire. Composed in her distinctive lyrical style, the pieces (suggesting the influence of Mendelssohn and
Chopin), reflect her ability to combine elements of Romanticism with Classical
structures. Her husband, Robert Schumann, spoke of the Soirées musicales
as boasting a "wealth of unconventional resources, her ability to entangle
the secret, more deeply twisting threads and then to unravel them."
Prushansky's exquisitely delicate rendition of the Notturno in F major
transported the listener into the beauty, delicacy and Romantic freedom of
Clara Schumann's musical world, the artist's hearty, radiant playing of the Mazurka
in G major and the Polonaise in A minor conjuring up the grand
ambience of the glittering concert halls in which Clara would have appeared
throughout Europe and England. Performing the (largely forgotten)
Impromptu in E Major (1844), Prushansky highlighted its wistful flow of melodies
with supple phrasing, subtle dynamics and a warm tone. How inspiring it
was to hear these splendid pieces of Clara Schumann!
Born in Israel in 1987, Sharon Prushansky
attended the Buchmann-Mehta School of Music (Tel Aviv), earning a bachelor's
degree there in piano and organ, then attending the Schola Cantorum in Basel,
Switzerland, where she studied harpsichord, organ and fortepiano. A specialist in
historical performance as well as in historical keyboard instruments, she
mostly focuses on music of the Romantic era, also performing on modern
pianos and the organ. Since 2009, Sharon Prushansky has resided in Switzerland.













