Schubert, Piano Sonatas, A. Schiff (ECM, 2015) Beethoven, Final Piano Sonatas, A. Schiff (ECM, 2008) |
Haydn's C major sonata (no. 60, Hob. XVI:50) sounded much like other Haydn sonatas, and in Schiff's hands that was charming, idiosyncratic, and slightly self-indulgent. The laconic opening theme, played comically with a single finger, received Schiff's typically clipped staccato attack, and the tempo, although plenty fast, bubbled more than rushed. Throughout this piece and its light companion in the same key, Mozart's no. 16 (K. 545, the one that you certainly know), Schiff used the repeats to add fun embellishments. Formal delights, like the false recapitulation, deep in the bass register, in the middle of the Haydn first movement, were pointed out wryly rather than obtrusively -- as in the third movement, where the rondo subject takes these funny wrong turns, getting hung up on surprise harmonic areas. The second movement had the feel of an opera aria, very free rhythmically and with an ultra-delicate touch, even in the octave passages. The Mozart felt equally blithe, late sonata or no, with a development section so short that one could almost describe the piece as a sonatina. Both of these works, which had much in common, made nice openers for the more substantial sonatas that followed them.
Robert Battey, Pianist András Schiff is note-perfect at Strathmore concert (Washington Post, March 17) Anthony Tommasini, Andras Schiff Turns Mischievous at Carnegie Hall (New York Times, March 13) Jay Nordlinger, A knight in recital (The New Criterion, March 11) David Gordon Duke, Classical review: Andras Schiff excels with Last Sonatas (Vancouver Sun, March 2) Mark Swed, András Schiff slyly and expertly plays late sonatas of legends (Los Angeles Times, February 19) Joshua Kosman, András Schiff review: Pianist’s magnificent sonata display (San Francisco Chronicle, February 16) |
Schubert's C minor sonata (no. 19, D. 958) did not play to the same strengths, as Schiff is not really a forza kind of player, reveling most in the first movement's eccentric development section, the whole thing pretty but a little snoozy. This was matched by a gloomy but rather delicate second movement and a Menuetto, with its stops and starts and murky trio, that was on the precious side. Finally, in the fourth movement, the piece came to life in Schiff's hands, the pervasive dotted rhythms devilish and the intricate hand-crossings handled beautifully. For encores, Schiff stuck with Schubert, giving polished renditions of the Ungarische Melodie in B minor, D. 817, and the Impromptu No. 2 in E-flat major, D. 899. (There was a third, I am told: a Beethoven Bagatelle, op. 126, no. 4.)
If you missed the first encore, I wonder if you were even there! Schiff should stick to Bach. While his Haydn wasn't bad, the Mozart lacked all the life that even a 10-year old performer can give to it. There was no joy at all in the wonderful first movement. It just sounded as if he was saving his strength for the Schubert. As for the Beethoven, which is one of the great sonatas, his interpretation was just awful. He never got the right tempo. He played the first variation slower than the theme in the third movement. But at least it was better than the Mozart. The encores were the highlight of the performance.
ReplyDeleteIf you did not understand that I did not hear the third encore, not the first, I wonder if you even read my review.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your thoughts.