Sir Andras Schiff played the second (and
last) of his recitals in Vancouver this year. The evening was an intense
emotional experience – two massive works, Beethoven’s Op. 111 sonata and
Schubert’s B-flat major sonata, D. 960 – and the experience left me spiritually
elated, though physically drained.
The artist opened his concert with Haydn’s Sonata in E-flat major, Hob XVI:52, the
first of his three “London” sonatas. Among the three sonatas, and even among
Haydn’s other sonatas, this one is perhaps the largest in scope and in size. In
his performance, Schiff’s taste and sense of timing, especially comic timing,
were impeccable. The many rapid scale runs in the first movement, in mm. 9 to
10, mm. 17 to 19, for example, were like beautiful strings of pearl. Throughout
the sonata, Schiff managed to convey the drama of the music while maintaining
an incredible sense of lightness, and never pushing the instrument. The closing
of the phrase at m. 26, I thought, was played especially beautifully and
elegantly. I loved the sound he evoked with the clock-like theme at mm. 27 to
29, with the pairs of 32nd and 16th notes. The rapid 32nd-note
runs for the right hand at mm. 30 to 32 had a wonderful breathless quality and,
again, a beguiling lightness. The pianist was masterful in his playing of two
brief transitional passages, in the two measures (mm. 44 to 45) that introduce
the development, and in the octave passage (mm. 109 to 110) that precede the
coda/codetta, Schiff changed the mood and the colour of the music like a
sorcerer.
I once again marveled at Schiff’s sense of
timing in the Adagio, where he
illuminated the beauty of the music for all of us to behold. The obsessive
repeated notes that open the third movement, and the prevailing feeling of a
wild chase, remind me of the finale of Beethoven’s Sonata in F major, Op. 10, No. 2. Here, Schiff really took us on a
roller coaster ride (albeit a brief one) and realized to perfection the
youthful and unbuttoned humour of an elderly Haydn.
For his final sonata, Beethoven returns to the
key C minor, one that has such special meaning for him. I believe that in spite
of its relative brevity, the Sonata in C
minor, Op. 111, is one of the composer’s most intensely emotional works. In
the opening of the 1st movement, Schiff managed to immediately
create a sense of gravity and massiveness. In the rapid 16th-note
runs at mm. 23 to 28, and in the rapid 16th-note right hand broken
chords with left hand octaves at mm. 58 to 61 (and again at mm. 132 to 138),
Schiff really held back and played them quite deliberately, with great depth of
sound, giving them a real sense of weight.
In the Arietta
that followed, I felt that Schiff played the movement as one long breath, as we
also held our breath until the last sounds evaporated. It was a cathartic
experience to live through. Schiff’s interpretation of the work last night
reminded me of incredible performance of this work by Claudio Arrau who, in the
last movement, really took us into another realm. In the trills that dominated
the final pages of this sonata, Schiff, like Arrau, also took us into the realm
of spiritual communion with the composer.
I appreciated the intermission that
followed the Beethoven, although I was wishing for a quiet place to prepare
myself for the equally emotionally demanding second half. For the second half,
Schiff gave us his view of Mozart’s Sonata
in D major, K. 576. Beauty of sound was what struck me about this
performance. I believe this is significant because Mozart, who is usually
sparing with expressive markings in his score, wrote in this movement the word dolce, twice. Schiff’s shaping of the
phrases was impeccable, especially at mm. 41 to 45 and at mm. 121 to 125, where
there was palpable warmth emanating from the music. The pianist also made me
aware of the contrapuntal intricacies of Mozart’s writing in this movement,
especially in the beauty of the writing for the left hand. In the second
movement, I especially appreciated the attention Schiff gave to the left hand
accompaniment figures, where there was a feeling of weightlessness as well as
an understated beauty. The artist’s playing of the concluding Allegretto was witty and charming. What
particularly stayed with me was the theme in the left hand, with brief
interjections by the right hand, at mm. 26 to 29, and again at mm. 117 to 120.
Schiff’s playing of Schubert’s Sonata in B-flat major, D. 960,
overwhelmed me. After the opening chorale-like melody, the G-flat major theme
was understated (Schubert did write pp,
but most pianists play it more prominently), but the otherworldly beauty of
this theme really shone through clearly. His pacing throughout the long
movement was laudable, and the many pregnant pauses were charged with meaning.
If Schubert was touching death with the
slow movement of the A major sonata, Schiff played on Sunday, the slow movement
of this sonata must be death itself. The pianist did not play the opening like
a dirge, acknowledging Schubert’s indications of andante as well as sostenuto. His voicing of the chords in
the opening of the A major section was almost as if choirs of angels were
descending from heaven to soothe us.
As if he didn’t want to abruptly dispel the
mood of the slow movement, Schiff played the beginning of the scherzo with a true pianissimo. Again the pianist was mindful of Schubert’s indication
of con delicatezza. In the fourth movement, I appreciate Schiff’s choice
of tempo, which I thought fit the movement properly within the larger scheme of
the entire sonata. Under Schiff’s hands, even the very tricky second theme (m.
86), with rapid 16th-notes in the right hand, and 8th-note
interjections in the off beat by the left hand, sounded graceful.
With the final chords of the movement that
end the work with a pyrrhic victory, the audience stood up to cheer, as did I.
In his own notes for the recital, Sir Andras Schiff writes that Schubert’s
playing of his own lieder, “transported his listeners to higher spheres and
brought tears to their eyes.” I could easily say the same for Schiff’s own
performances these last few days.
No amount of sophisticated technology can
replace the power of live music making, especially when it is under the hands
of a master like Andras Schiff.
Under the urging of the audience, Schiff very
graciously played for us the Aria
from Bach’s Goldberg Variations. It
was playing with a luminous quality, of fluidity, and flexibility. Could this
have been a tantalizing preview of Sir Andras Schiff’s next appearance in our
city?
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