There are varying opinions as to what went wrong (admittedly, most in the audience didn’t think anything was wrong and were happily delighted, all the same) – and I am myself not sure where to assign primary blame for the outcome, the bad acoustic, the piano, or the way both were taken into too little consideration by Mr. Haefliger. The easiest answer is: All of the above. At any rate, the result was something less than a professional grade recital.
W.A.Mozart, Piano Sonatas, Andreas Haefliger Avie F.Schubert, Impromptus opp.90 & 142, Andreas Haefliger Sony S.Gubaidulina, Solo Piano Works, Andreas Haefliger Sony |
Sympathetic (but undesired) afternotes and vibrations hung over the “Appassionata”, the same rumble-mumble from the bowels of the piano, now turned up even louder, was, at worst, akin to the sound of jet engines warming up. The Allegro assai was overwhelmingly bullish and stormy, the Andante con moto a lullaby as gentle and sweet as sugar first, then a showcase of souped-up romanticism. The polar opposite of the compelling understatedness of Hans Richter-Haaser whose obscure recording I much enjoy in this work. With shock-effect attacks it all went into the finale that, missed notes aside, sounded pretty good at first because finally the character of the music matched that of the playing a little more. But then Mr. Haefliger proceeded to bang the music (and the listener) so mercilessly into submission that all good will dissipated. If I didn’t know Beethoven could ever sound like Mahler: crass, brash, neurotic, wilful, brutal, etc., here was a pretty good hint that it might be possible, after all. It was Beethoven on steroids and Ecstasy and a disconcerting experience...perhaps because I am fresh off a serenely sublime Wilhelm Backhausen-trip through all the sonatas.
The Schubert sonata did nothing to ameliorate the impression from the first half of the program. This was simply unbefitting the good reputation of Mr. Haefliger’s. Lack of control and stiffness, a sense of constant effort and even slight discomfort, the piano growling away in disfigured rhythms, continuation of over-pedaling (given the surroundings), and memory- and finger-slips assured that less of this sublime music survived this train-wreck of a recital than desired.
This should not reflect on the Swiss Residence Concert Series – they could not have asked a more renown and reputable artist to appear. What he does with that recital is out of their hands. For anyone interested in architecture or good food (let alone both), this series is well worth attending no matter the musical result. And next time, the music (not always classical) might well be up to par, again.
Information about this series can be gotten by sending an e-mail to culture@was.rep.admin.ch