Fellner also played one of the early Beethoven sonatas last year, making me envious of Vienna and London, where he was planning a complete Beethoven cycle (see the complete online score -- Vol. 1 and Vol. 2). As it turns out Sunday's concert was the first installment of Washington's own Beethoven cycle from Fellner, co-sponsored by the Embassy of Austria and the Embassy Series. Fellner opted to begin with the three sonatas of op. 31, the same set played by András Schiff in October, followed by Maurizio Pollini, who played only the second of the three. Fellner's approach seemed closest to that of Paul Lewis, whose new complete cycle on disc is one of the most pleasing, not least for its polish and restraint. No. 1 had a more cushioned staccato attack than Schiff's biting stabs, and Fellner brought out the melodic touches in the first-movement development's arpeggiation nicely. The second movement, taken at a brisk pace, was held strictly in tempo and yet with striking sotto voce effects and delicacy in the filigree textures. The amiable reading of the third movement was quirky but with an admirable restraint.
Fellner's "Tempest" was not as poetic as Pollini's, which captured the foggy mist of the opening measures. Fellner, by contrast, seemed to cast the fast parts of the first movement as more Caliban than Ariel, with the monster periodically lost in reverie at the isle "full of noises." Here the second movement also stood out for its unusual tempo, in this case very slow, with murky rumbles of thunder subtly voiced in the crossing hand. Of all three readings heard recently, however, Fellner's third movement was the best, held consistently to a gentle tempo, the smooth touch allowing inner voices to blossom and pleasing contrasts of dynamics and colors to emerge. Fellner's op. 31/3 began with a detached, playful character, not clownish, but sort of breathless and talkative. The humor in the crashing dynamic shifts of the second movement made this scherzo a rather wry joke, more arched eyebrow than elbow jabbed in the ribs. After a third movement that was graceful but ultimately a little plain, the bravura tempo of the fourth was a thrill.
Anne Midgette, Mining Beethoven, One Opus at a Time (Washington Post, December 9) Vivien Schweitzer, Beethoven Sonatas, a Touch Tempered (New York Times, December 7) |
The next installment of Till Fellner's Beethoven cycle will feature opp. 2 and 57, scheduled for the Austrian Embassy this spring (March 8). At the end of her review, Anne Midgette notes that François-Frédéric Guy is offering all 32 Beethoven sonatas within a 10-day period at La Maison Francaise (January 16 to 25). I have been listening to his recent Beethoven recordings, too (review forthcoming).
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