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Dance-like Vitality Nick van Bloss plays Chopin heard by ANDREW SCHARTMANN '... unprecedented freshness ...' It has been nearly five years since Nick van Bloss returned to the concert circuit from a fifteen-year-long retirement. His comeback in 2009 was initiated by a series of successful concerts and a highly acclaimed recording of Bach's Goldberg Variations. And if his latest Chopin recording is any indication of what is in store, then we should all be grateful for van Bloss' decision to rejoin the class of active performing artists. A formidable technique is one sign of an excellent pianist, especially when it goes unnoticed. Van Bloss' performance of Chopin's difficult Third Piano Sonata sounds so effortless that it is bound to inspire confidence in even the weakest of amateurs, who will come away thinking that he too can conquer this work. More than a subject of marvel, van Bloss' superb technique allows him to bring out the refined counterpoint at the heart of this music — a feature that is too often obscured by an overbearing use of the sustain pedal. Even those passages that do not exhibit dense contrapuntal weavings benefit from this conservative approach. The first movement's second theme, for instance, breathes with an unprecedented freshness in van Bloss' hands, which sculpt the passage in a crisp but expressive light. One potential downside to this approach is that it can lead to heavily accented downbeats, such that the bar-lines of the score present themselves far too candidly to the ear. This danger manifests itself in van Bloss' performance of the finale, in which the opening chords, though molded into a sensitive crescendo arc, are heavy handed. Like any high-caliber performer, however, van Bloss' creative insights far outweigh the technical imbalances of his performance. Thumping chords notwithstanding, the finale is characterized by a highly imaginative approach to articulation, which breathes a dancelike vitality into a theme that is often perceived as brooding and serious. Van Bloss' sensitive pedalling and articulation infuse his interpretation of Chopin's Preludes, Op 28, with a colorful spectrum of sound. Rather than using the pedal as a technical safeguard for the daunting left-hand figuration in the G-major prelude, for instance, van Bloss uses it to articulate the music's shifting harmonic palette. And a similar approach to these two facets of performance allow him to navigate the subtle variety of characters that form the cast of Chopin's F-major prelude. Apart from being a showcase of flawless technique, van Bloss' interpretation offers us a perspective on Chopin's music that is quite different from the usual grandiose romantic swagger of many twentieth-century recordings. Nowhere in his playing does he hit us over the head with sweeping gestures suitable only to the concert hall. Rather, through a reserved but sensitive approach to the keyboard, van Bloss offers us a glimpse of Chopin the salon composer. In this sense, his project is one of recovery — one that seeks to excavate the composer's reclusive personality. And so, while this new recording makes an important musical contribution to the abundant Chopin discography, it also carries with it an implicit intellectual argument. This depth of approach makes van Bloss' work all the more interesting and worthy of our attention. Copyright © 10 March 2014 Andrew Schartmann, Connecticut USA