|
MARTHA ARGERICH piano EMI
Classics 56974
by Jonathan Yungkans
If it is, indeed, true
that in various epochs certain stereotypes have come to be associated
with certain keys, then we should assemble all the masterpieces set in
any given key and compare their prevailing moods.
- Robert Schumann, "Characteristics of the Keys" (1835)
The bonanza of Martha Argerich discs from EMI continues
with this "radiant and life-affirming C major of life," as the liner notes
call this release. EMI has gone digging in the rich mine of Argerich live
recordings - the Mozart from 1978, the Beethoven
from 1992 - unearthing at least one nugget of great worth, and giving
us the priceless opportunity to compare these two works side by side.
The opening Allegro alternates between martial
and festive airs, with a number of harmonic and expressive ambiguities
appearing throughout, including something relatively new for Mozart -
a number of unmodulated transitions from major to minor and back again.
These transitions are especially noticeable in the development, where
a secondary theme, a march sounding surprisingly like the French revolutionary
song "La Marseillaise," flits back and forth between a number of major
and minor tonalities within a handful of bars, while Mozart enriches the
texture with canonic interplay between piano and orchestra. We are kept
guessing as to where exactly this music is going, the prevailing tone
kept in suspense even into the movement's final bars.
The Adagio that follows is more austere than in
many of Mozart's other concertos. Calm but not entirely serene, it is
formal sounding and at the same time a little mysterious, with the piano
adding half-lights of brightness here and there. The Finale begins
with a theme taken from his opera Idomeneo, but we are constantly surprised.
The music moves into the minor key sooner than expected, and goes from
there to a magnificently songful passage for piano, accompanied by cellos
and bases and joined by the flute, oboe and bassoon. The rapture of this
passage does not last for long before it dissolves into passion and heartache,
and we are plunged just as suddenly back into the high spirits that began
this movement.
Argerich's alert and sensitive playing, matching every
nuance of this music as though she were improvising it on the spot, is
paired with equally charged support from the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra
under Szymon Goldberg. There is also a poise to her playing here that
is most welcome and appropriate - quite different from the huntress quality
in her performance of K. 466 with Alexandre Rabinovich and the Orchestra
di Padova e del Veneto (Teldec 98407 - full-price). If there were doubts
in anyone's mind about Argerich as a Mozart player, this performance should
help dispel them.
Even without Mozart's delicacy, Beethoven capitalized
and expanded upon several compositional elements in K. 503 in his First
Piano Concerto. Most obvious is the enlarged scale, which Mozart had been
working toward in his works - according to Steinberg, Beethoven's First
was probably the largest concerto the Viennese public had heard up to
that time. Like Mozart, Beethoven allows the piano to enter with an entirely
different idea than introduced by the orchestra, but unlike Mozart, it
is an idea to which he never returns.
Also, not only are the abrupt harmonic transitions and
sudden shifts in tone with which Mozart experimented in K. 503 now part
and parcel of Beethoven's compositional style, but also his sense of surprise
thematically, as evidenced at the beginning of this work. We have to wait
until after the entrance of the soloist for the complete statement of
the opening theme, and spend a considerable amount of time in the minor
before we get there.
There are also some things in this work that Beethoven
did not repeat later. The first-movement development, almost entirely
in piano and pianissimo, forms a shimmering interlude of parallel chords
and scales that restatements of the opening theme color but do not break.
Mozart would have written something very similar. There are moments like
this in Beethoven's Third and Fourth Concertos (he wrote the Second Concerto
before the First), but the First is the only one in which he devotes an
entire development section to a reverie such as this. It is interesting
to conjecture whether Beethoven would have continued in this vein had
he not gone deaf.
It is extremely illuminating to have the Beethoven First
and K. 503 on the same disc so we can note all these parallels for ourselves.
Unfortunately, conductor Heinz Walberg is not on the same level as Szymon
Goldgerg as a collaborator; his conducting of the Royal Concertgebouw
Orchestra is unimaginative and plodding. Argerich tries her best to shine,
but her playing sparkles much less this time - a sliver of ore encased
in rock. Even the sound is muddled and grayer than in the Mozart - surprising,
since it was recorded digitally 14 years later.
Is this disc worth digging through the shelves for it?
For the Mozart, yes - it is one of the best performances of K. 503 that
I have heard. Should EMI find more recordings of Argerich and Goldberg
deep in the Concertgebouw archives, I hope they do not hesitate to bring
them up to the light of day so we can gauge their weight and value for
ourselves.
Jonathan
Yungkans
doesn't usually pan for gold
- unless, of course, he's in a record store.
787:: 20.8.2000 ©Jonathan Yungkans Explore the Flying Inkpot They're
Alive!
Bit deadish: Other
Resources at The Flying Inkpot
|
BACH Toccata in C minor. Partita No.2. English Suite No.2. (DG Originals) CHOPIN Piano Concerti with the Montreal PO/Dutoit (EMI) MOZART Concerto No.25. BEETHOVEN Concerto No.1. (EMI) MOZART Piano Concertos Nos. 10, 19 & 20. Various/Argerich (Teldec) MOZART Music for 2 Pianos. Argerich/Rabinovich (Teldec) SHOSTAKOVICH/ TCHAIKOVSKY/ KIEEWETTER Trios for Piano, Violin and Cello. With Kremer and Maisky (DG)
Misc Recitals Argerich - Live from the Concertgebouw, 1978 & 1979 (EMI) Argerich plays Tchaikovsky, Schumann, Bach, Chopin, etc. With the Warsaw NPO/Kord (Accord) Argerich performs Music on the theme of Prometheus. Various/Berlin PO/Abbado (Sony) Music from Saratoga featuring Argerich with various musicians (EMI)
|
|||||||||||||||