Stephen Coombs is one of the leading English pianists of his generation, active not only as a soloist and recitalist but as a chamber player and duo pianist. While his repertory includes mainstream compositions by Mendelssohn, Debussy, Ravel, Scriabin, and others, he has become particularly well known for his interpretations of works by lesser-known late-Romantic composers, such as Arensky, Bortkiewicz, Glazunov, Reynaldo Hahn, and many others. Coombs has achieved acclaim for his recordings in the massive Hyperion series The Romantic Piano Concerto, wherein he has performed with distinction concertos by both familiar (Mendelssohn) and unfamiliar composers (Alexander Goedike, et al.).
Coombs was born in Birkenhead (near Liverpool), England, on July 11, 1960. He exhibited talent early on, capturing second prize at England's National Piano Competition when he was 13. His first serious studies were at the Royal Northern College of Music, Junior School, after which he studied at the Royal College of Music. His teachers included Joan Slade, Heather Slade-Lipkin, and Gordon Green.
Throughout the 1980s Coombs slowly built his career, both at home and abroad, appearing as a recitalist and soloist with major orchestras. But he developed his parallel career as a chamber music performer and duo pianist now, as well. In 1989 he recorded a disc of Debussy works for two pianos with Christopher Scott on the Hyperion label. Three years later he made the first of four recordings for the same label in its Romantic Piano Concerto series, with the F minor Piano Concerto by Arensky and the First Piano Concerto of Bortkiewicz.
Coombs followed with a string of assorted recordings for Hyperion, including a series, begun in 1994, devoted to the complete solo piano music of Glazunov. Further discs containing various rarities quickly followed, with the critical consensus consistently positive.
In 1998 and 1999, Coombs served both as festival director and artistic director of Pianoworks -- the International Piano Festival, held in London. In the early 2000s he joined the chamber group Room-Music, which made two recordings for Hyperion, the first containing chamber works by Hahn (2003) and the latter with music by Catoire (2004). Room-Music was chosen as ensemble in residence for the 2004-2005 season at St. John's, Smith Square, London. Among recent recordings by Coombs was the 2006 CD of solo piano works of Glazunov on Helios (Hyperion), the fourth and final volume in the series.
Little known today, Anton Arensky was one of the brightest stars of the late nineteenth century Russian music scene. Arensky was born in 1861 to a pair of devoted amateur musicians under whose guidance he began his training. After private studies (piano and composition) with Zikke in St. Petersburg, Arensky entered that city's conservatory in 1879, taking lessons from Rimsky-Korsakov. He scored consistently high marks with conservatory faculty during his three years as a student, eventually graduating with a gold medal; upon the completion of his studies in 1882 Arensky became one of the youngest professors ever hired by the Moscow Conservatory.
Arensky's years at Moscow were fruitful; between 1882 and his resignation from the Conservatory's faculty in 1895 he completed most of his larger works (including the early Piano Concerto of 1882 and both Symphonies: B minor 1883; A major 1889). In 1891 his first opera, Son na Volge (A Dream on the Volga) -- which he had worked on intermittently since his student days -- was successfully premiered in Moscow. His next operatic endeavor, however, fared rather worse than the first; Rafael was an immediate failure at its 1894 premiere.
Asked to replace Balakirev as director of the imperial chapel in St. Petersburg, Arensky returned to his home city in 1895; save for occasional national and international tours, he remained there for the rest of his life. By the mid-1890s Arensky's somewhat diminished stature as a composer was replaced by an increased public awareness of his gifts at the keyboard and on the podium. Having served as director of the Russian Choral Society (1888 to 1895) during his Moscow days, Arensky was no stranger to the baton, and in 1901 he resigned his position at the imperial chapel to pursue a fuller schedule of conducting and performing appearances. Death came prematurely in 1905 when Arensky, after decades of hard living and overindulgence, succumbed to tuberculosis.
Save for the well-known Variations on a Theme of Tchaikovsky for string orchestra, little of Arensky's substantial output has maintained a place on contemporary concert programs. He was essentially a miniaturist, and his finest music is to be found in the shorter works for solo piano and his melodious songs (which seem to have influenced Rachmaninov's conception of Russian song). Arensky's style, especially in such early works as the Piano Concerto and First Symphony, is too inconsistent to bear witness to a strong musical personality, and instead presents as a pastiche of stylistic traits borrowed from a variety of influences, such as Chopin and Tchaikovsky (though rarely Arensky's own teacher Rimsky-Korsakov). However, his influence as a teacher -- to such future luminaries as Rachmaninov and Scriabin -- has earned him a place of distinction in the history of Russian music.
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