Composer: Fazil Say
- Black Earth, Op. 8
- Violin Sonata, Op. 7: I. Introduction: Melancholy
- Violin Sonata, Op. 7: II. Grotesque
- Violin Sonata, Op. 7: III. Perpetuum mobile
- Violin Sonata, Op. 7: IV. —
- Violin Sonata, Op. 7: V. Epilogue: Melancholy
- Piano Concerto, Op. 4, "Silk Road"
- Silence of Anatolia, Op. 11
- Obstinacy
- Paganini Variations
- Dervish In Manhattan
Fazil Say, piano
Laurent Korcia, violin
Orquestra Gulbenkian / Muhai Tang
Orchestre National de France / Eliahu Inbal
Kudsi Erguner Quartet
Date: 2003
Label: Naïve
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The latest in a grand line of applause-inciting pianist-composers
In many ways, the 34-year-old Turkish-born pianist Fazil Say is a throwback to an earlier pianistic age – not in his playing style so much as his commitment to composing music as well as performing it. The past century has seen a firm line divided between those disciplines, such that anyone not content to specialise in one was destined for a reputation for dilettantism in both.
Say’s music, though, clamours to be taken seriously. Despite a thoroughly current soundworld, it shares with the pianist’s Romantic forebears a solid pianistic grounding. Music composed by non-performers may have the advantage as far as sonic innovation is concerned, often leaving performers to learn or even develop new techniques to keep up, but performing composers have a distinct advantage in writing music with greater technical and emotional connection with the instrument.
That said, Say is at his best the further he gets away from the solo piano, in these works at least. His two concerto-like works, the Silk Road for piano and chamber orchestra (1997) and his Two Pieces for Piano and Orchestra, ‘Silence of Anatolia’ and ‘Obstinacy’ (2001), are both knowing, percussion-heavy tributes to the earthy Modernism of Bartók and Stravinsky. His Violin Sonata (1997) takes its folklore more at face value, matching a fine gift for melody to rather colourfully violinistic technique.
Of his solo works, Black Earth (1997) opens the recording in a fusion of sources sounding rather like a Turkish folk song jointly rendered by Rachmaninov and Art Tatum. Those same influences return toward the end of the disc in the Paganini Variations (1995), which starts firmly in Rachmaninov territory in Paganini’s 24th Caprice.
Say’s unapologetic love of improvisation comes through on a broader canvas in Dervish in Manhattan (2000), where Sufi music and western jazz meet across rhythmic and cultural divides. With a Turkish ney amid a more conventional jazz trio, the players find a strong sense of immediacy that clearly resonates with the audience in this live recording.
That response, in fact, calls attention to Say’s biggest disadvantage as a composer – the need for immediate gratification and the constant temptation to play to the crowd. Short solo encores may have the biggest payoff on the applause meter, but his extended works are the ones that show the most compositional range.
-- K Smith, Gramophone
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Fazıl Say (born 14 January 1970 in Ankara) is a Turkish pianist and composer. He began studying piano at age 3 and wrote his first piece – a piano sonata – at the age of 14. Say attracted international attention with the piano piece Black Earth (1997), and since then has increasingly turned to the large orchestral forms. In 2007 he aroused international interest with his Violin Concerto 1001 Nights in the Harem, and after that scored further great successes with his symphonies. On 15 April 2013, Say was sentenced to 10 months in jail for his crime of "insulting religious values". The conviction was reversed on 26 October 2015.
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