Well, this appears to be the year for late Beethoven.
Steven Osborne, in his wonderful recital at the Chan Centre
for the Performing Arts in Vancouver, gave us the composer’s Op. 90, Op. 101,
and Op. 106 sonatas. Next Sunday, Sir Andras Schiff will perform Op. 109, then
Nelson Goerner will essay the Op. 106 again, and Paul Lewis will return in May
to play Op. 109, Op. 110, and Op. 111.
Beethoven’s Sonata in
E Minor, Op. 90 is truly an unjustly neglected work. It is a work of great
contrast and beauty and, strangely enough, much of it reminds me of the sonatas
of Schubert, in how the materials unfold and in its melodic invention,
especially in the slow movement. Osborne certainly made a strong case for this,
probably really the first of the “late” piano sonatas. There were some magical
moments in his playing, namely, in the final ritardando before the end of the first movement (m. 233), and at
the end of the second movement, the ritardando
(m. 281) followed by the accelerando that ends the work. In the slow movement,
Osborne managed to make each return of the theme beautiful and convincing.
Anton Rubinstein reportedly moved audiences to tears with his playing of this
movement. I thought Osborne’s performance of this work was just as moving.
Between the two sonatas of Beethoven, the pianist performed
Schubert’s little KlavierstΓΌck in A Major, D. 604. Like
a sorbet between two main courses, this miniature, exquisitely played, was just
what the audience (and maybe the pianist as well) needed to “clear the palate”.
I feel that the Sonata
in A Major, Op. 101 is, pianistically speaking, the most difficult of the
sonatas after the Hammerklavier.
Other than technically challenging, it is terribly difficult to capture the
constantly shifting moods of the music. Other than more than rising to the
technical challenges Beethoven set for the pianist, Osborne successfully gave
us a coherent account of the work, giving us a sense of the organic unity of
the music. His playing of the march in the 2nd movement, to me
reminiscent of the march from Schumann’s Fantasy,
Op. 17, was blistering. More than the excitement the dramatic moments of this
work can generate, what stayed in my mind with Osborne’s performance of this
work, indeed for the entire concert, were the intimate moments, like the slow
movement of this sonata (Langsam und
sehnsuchtvoll), especially with the return of the 1st movement
theme at m. 24.
Any performance of Beethoven’s Sonata in B-flat Major (Hammerklavier)
is an event. Lasting 40 to 45 minutes, the challenge, other than the superhuman
technical hurdles, is for the artist to hold all the disparate elements. I felt
that Osborne more than rose to the challenges in every aspect of this great
work, not neglecting any details in the score, but also clearly seeing the way
ahead of him, and aware of the larger structure of the work. Osborne’s playing
of the Adagio sostenuto movement, the
emotional core of the entire work, was rapturous. In the final fugue, where
Beethoven emancipated the trill as a mere ornament, Osborne succeeded in making
the texture of this rather wild and dense movement clear and tremendously
exciting.
I would have thought it impossible to follow such a work
with any encore, but upon the urging of the enthusiastic audience, Steven
Osborne granted us a little morsel, Brahms’ Intermezzo
in E-flat Major, Op. 117, No. 1, a work as intimate as the Hammerklavier was dramatic, and played
it as a benediction and thanksgiving for the afternoon of great music.
I wish you would consider reviewing for one if our newspapers. Unlike their reviews, yours have real substance.
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