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Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas,
Complete Piano Concertos, Gerard Willems,
Stuart & Sons Piano |
| [ABC Classics 465 077-2, 465
264-2, 465 659-2] |
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April 2005
In
a recent issue of Stereophile John
Marks wrote at some length about a new and
remarkable piano from Australia that had been
used in an award-winning recording of
Beethoven’s complete piano sonatas, played by
Gerard Willems. My ears pricked up at this
news. As those of you who have read my reviews
in StereoTimes will know, I own a
number of sets of these sonatas. If there is
an “ultimate” set, I’ve yet to find it; even
great pianists may not be consistently great.
So it’s always very interesting, and often
very fruitful, to listen at length to new
versions of these supreme creations for the
pianoforte. And that’s just what I’ve been
doing for a couple of months now, almost to
the exclusion of other music.
Talk about an embarrassment of riches! In
response to my email query, that reached him
in Paris, producer Brendan Ward sent me for
review not just the piano sonatas, but also
the five piano concertos, and a DVD of the
fifth concerto, the Emperor.
(Unfortunately this DVD is currently available
only in PAL format and most DVD players sold
in the United States play only NTSC formatted
discs. My notebook computer and a pair of
Sennheiser 580s came to the rescue.) I rather
viewed this latter as a curiosity. It is,
after all, the music that counts. It is the
music and the reifying mystery of the
performance that creates an almost mystical
relationship. However, I suppose for the
same reason that a jazz aficionado likes to go
to a club to watch his musical heroes play, I
enjoy watching pianists whose playing I
admire. Seeing them in action, in this case in
action with a conductor and symphony
orchestra, expands and enhances the
composer/performer/listener relationship into
a more complex and vivid experience. The
Gerard Willems revealed in this DVD, with his
programmatic commentary on the concerto
(Napoleon had invaded and occupied Vienna at
the time of its composition), who winks at
conductor Antony Walker at the conclusion of
the first movement, and who, in the
supplementary material, conducts a master
class for young students, seems relaxed,
easy-going, free of self-importance and
thoroughly likeable. How much more remarkable
it seems then that his performances of the
sonatas rises to such wondrous heights and
gripping profundities. I have come to treasure
all of these discs, including the DVD.
Most sets make some attempt at keeping the
sonatas in chronological order. (Strictly
following this plan would necessitate an
additional disc.) This set is unusual in this
regard: each disc seems programmed as if it
were a single concert performance. This
arrangement is quite unusual and I have come
to like it a lot. For example, the first disc
of the first volume has sonatas 21, 6, 24 and
30. There is a section in Arnold Steinardt’s
delightful book, Indivisible by Four,
that sheds an interesting light on this
production choice. Steinhardt is first
violinist of the Guarneri Quartet and he
discusses their experience with the Slee
Endowment in Buffalo, New York. Frederick Slee,
a lawyer and passionate amateur string player,
set aside money for an annual performance of
the complete Beethoven string quartet cycle,
stipulating the exact order of their
performance. (The six-concert cycle begins
with Opus 127 and ends with Opus 135, very
much not in chronological order.) The Guarneri,
as well as the Budapest Quartet before them,
were invited to Buffalo to perform the cycle
under the auspices of the Slee Endowment. Both
groups bridled at the high-handed attitude by
an amateur in dictating the order of
performance, only to discover they really
liked Slee’s specified sequence.
In fact, it was Brendan Ward’s intention to
publish chronologically but numerous factors
prevented it. This was the largest recording
project ever undertaken in Australia. Mr Ward
had to convince Gerard Willems, who is a
senior lecturer at the Sydney Conservatorium
of Music, to undertake the monumental task. He
had to arrange for the use of the Stuart and
Sons piano, which is housed in the Newcastle
Conservatorium of Music and was available only
on certain weekends. He had to solicit
donations to pay for all this, eventually
turning to the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation to complete the project. The ABC
decided to release the three volumes over a
two year period, leading up to the Sydney
Olympics in 2000. It turned out a remarkably
successful venture. The first volume sold over
10,000 units and won an ARIA (the Australian
equivalent of a Grammy in the USA). The second
and third volumes sold over 30,000 units, the
second winning another ARIA! The piano
concertos have sold over 10,000 units. As Mr
Ward noted in an email, this translates to
over 150,000 CDs of Beethoven’s sonatas and
concertos in Australian homes. It is a
wonderful cultural achievement.
Another unusual aspect of this set of CDs is
the importance and prominence of the piano.
The maker, Wayne Stuart, studied to be a piano
technician at the Sydney Conservatorium and
did postgraduate study in Japan (with Yamaha),
and in Europe. He found the atmosphere
hide-bound and stifling and began to rethink
the tradition that “bigger and thicker [sound]
is better.” More than twenty years later the
result is the instrument used in these
recordings, veneered in beautiful and very
rare bird’s-eye huon pine from Tasmania. The
single most important innovation of Stuart’s
genius is the design of the agraffe,
the device on the bridge that terminates the
speaking length of the strings. Piano strings
run from square-headed tuning pins embedded in
a wooden pin block at the front, across the
bridge (a curved strip of laminated hardwood
that couples the string vibration to the
soundboard), to the rear of the metal frame,
or harp, where they terminate. (A typical
concert grand frame must withstand up to
40,000 pounds of tension.) Individual notes
consist of one string (bass), two strings
(upper bass and lower midrange), or three
strings (midrange and treble). Multiple
strings are needed to maintain relatively even
loudness as the strings get thinner and
shorter. String termination in traditional
piano designs, which hasn’t changed for over
100 years, consists of two offset pins
embedded in the bridge. This imparts a
lateral tension to the string. But of
course the hammer strikes the string from
underneath, imparting a vertical
motion, and the conflict between vertical
motion and lateral tension generates
torsional forces. Stuart reasoned that
these forces would create noisy transients,
impair pitch security and cause a more rapid
decay. Over years of experimentation he
developed a device that terminates the string
in the vertical plane. Structurally
this places less stress on the soundboard,
enabling the Stuart & Sons piano to employ a
thinner soundboard. A thinner soundboard has
less inertia and is therefore more responsive
and produces a wider dynamic range. The
strings vibrate for a longer time and have a
very distinct character and unusual clarity.
The Australian composer Andrew Ford comments
that the Stuart “…bucks the trend of trying to
smooth everything out [like a Steinway], so
you don’t get an absolutely even sound on a
Stuart piano…you get much more color.” I
totally agree. To my ear, this piano captures
the body and richness of the modern piano and
the articulateness and clarity of the
pianoforte of the early 19th Century. “I
like to think,” wrote Gerard Willems, “that
this sound is what Beethoven imagined in his
mind as his deafness grew worse.” (If you’d
like to learn more about this extraordinary
instrument, please visit www.stuartandsons.com
and download the MP4).
Listening to the sound of this beautifully
recorded instrument gives me goose flesh. I
still have love of the Steinway sound, but the
Stuart & Sons piano has opened up new vistas
of delight and gratitude. I cannot imagine a
more perfect instrument for playing Beethoven.
Embarrassingly real, is what one
listener commented on the sound of the piano
used in these recordings.
Writers of a more “romantic” bent, whether
through choice or lack of knowledge about
music, sometimes refer to Beethoven’s late
piano sonatas (as well as his late quartets)
in awestruck poetical terms: uncharted
territory, transcendent, profoundly spiritual.
J.W.N. Sullivan made no bones about it: the
“Late Quartets” were for him the greatest
music ever written, period; with the late
piano sonatas a somewhat distant second. To
talk at any length and detail about the
latter, and in particular the last three
(Opera 109, 110, 111), requires a better man
than me, one with a profounder spiritual
understanding, a better vocabulary, and a hell
of lot more technical knowledge of music and
music history. Like a lot of people, I can
sense when I am in the presence of greatness,
but I don’t seem to know how to adequately
talk about it. The last movement of the last
sonata, for example, an eighteen minute and
thirty-one second set of variations (Beethoven
loved variations), is like a series of
transcendent epiphanies, beyond sturm und
drang, beyond beauty, beyond peace, beyond
love. And at the same time, utterly human.
Difficult as it may be to talk about the late
sonatas, to do them justice at the keyboard is
surely a great deal more difficult. I can
think of no higher praise of Maestro Willems
musicianship than to say that I find his
performance of these sonatas as deeply moving,
as intelligent and insightful as any I’ve
heard. And that includes some pretty exalted
company: Sviatoslav Richter, Artur Schnabel,
Ernst Levy. I once noted in an essay on
Hamlet, that the Dane had genius, and that
only a writer (and actor) of genius could have
created him. By the same token, the late piano
sonatas are spiritual testaments, they really
do delve uncharted territory, and they require
a piano player with the wisdom to understand
this and the skill to express it. Gerard
Willems has.
The following are a few notes I jotted down
while listening. I thought they might be of
some interest. These might have grown up into
paragraphs, but they may prove more
interesting and suggestive as they are.
Sonata No. 26 in E-flat major, Op 81a, “Les
Adieux”. Love this one, and the performance!
Willems’ humanity and warmth temper
everything. It’s a beautiful thing to behold.
Wish I could buy him a shot of Johnnie Walker
Red. That first movement, that clarion call,
the great spiritual adventurer beckons. Never
any doubt in Beethoven’s music, always on
solid ground. Slow movement so full of
longing, tears and joy. Shel’s [my brother’s]
comment: “I've always thought that you have to
be a little insane to play it [the last
movement] properly. You have to come to the
very edge of chaos. I listened very carefully,
and can only say that Willems comes as close
to this transcendental lunacy as is possible
within the bounds of sanity.” This is immense
praise. Beethoven gave Breitkopf hell for
renaming it from Das Lebewohl! Damn! to hear
so much and be able to say so little…
Sonata No. 7 in D major, Op 10, No. 3.
What’s all this about early and late periods?
I’ve never been comfortable with these
absolute distinctions. Declares the composer’s
genius, unabashed, fully fledged, something
that cannot be contained within the artificial
categories of the critics. Is there a single
note that’s merely ornamental, that can
removed without loss? Manus Sasonkin told me
that Beethoven’s earliest compositions showed
little promise: all of sudden, bang! a giant
emerges. Willems handles the Largo
beautifully, without sentimentality. This the
same path trodden in the later sonatas, only
not as far: is this true? does it make sense?
Yes and no: one does learn from a life’s
experiences. So dramatic and so sincere. The
Menuetto really works, is really integral with
what’s come before; a definite aspect of
Willems’ musicianship. The last movement can
hardly contain itself, contemplative and
explosive by turns…and then, and then the
gentlest disappearance.
Sonata No. 3 in C major, Op 2, No.3. A very
early Beethoven sonata. There are passages
that astonish with their radical departure
from Haydn and Mozart, and their proleptic
profundity. Stops me in my tracks, I have to
go look at the liner note: it really is the
third piano sonata. Surprises me again and
again. That Adagio. Amazing.
Sonata No. 29 in B-flat major, Op 106, “Hammerklavier”.
What a performance! Czerny said Beethoven
considered the Hammerklavier his greatest
sonata (before he composed the last three??)
but what a troublesome item it is for most
pianists! It’s a bear to play, has some
monstrous chord stretches, almost impossibly
fast metronome markings, and most pianists
don’t really seem to get it, to make it
cohere. Perhaps Willems’ fugue could be more
driven, more wild…consider the ‘50s Budapest
recordings of the Grosse Fuge…no…I need to
listen more, and more closely. Great
structural clarity, and the Stuart simply
soars here!
I remember reading somewhere that Bach’s Fifth
Brandenburg was a precursor to the modern
piano concerto due to the prominent role of
the harpsichord, typically a mere continuo
instrument. If that is so, the piano concerto
had a remarkably brief gestation period, for
it was not that long after Bach’s death that
Mozart was producing masterpieces in that
genre, the last, number twenty-seven, nine
months before his tragic death just after
midnight on December 5, 1791. A glance at my
CD collection will reveal that I do not
collect concertos; a handful by Mozart,
Beethoven, Schumann, Brahms, Prokofiev. But
there was a time I consumed piano concertos
for breakfast, dinner and tea, so they are
familiar territory. And I must say, Gerard
Willems recordings with the Sinfonia Australis
conducted by Antony Walker are splendid. The
orchestra, using period brass and tympani, are
spot on, clean, precise, utterly involved. All
the understanding, warmth and genial passion
Willems brought to the sonatas is in evidence
as well in the concertos. I’ve never been more
delighted by any recording of the Beethoven
concertos. Again, a few notes.
Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, Op 58. The
Rondo (Vivace) an uncanny and quite literal
sense of Willems’ phrasing speaking to me, as
though, if I listen very carefully, discrete,
word-like information will be revealed. Why
this continual sense of a simple and deep
humanity, a special kindness, in his playing?
The Sinfonia Astralis is fine, so dignified
and professional. There is so much to love in
this set of three CDs.
Piano Concerto No. 2 in Bb major, Op 19.
More of Mozart than Beethoven…except now and
then, very characteristic. The Rondo (Molto
allegro) is beautifully done, Willems and the
Sinfonia Australis are totally in tune with
one another, like a jazz band: pure magic.
Some reviewer noted there are more fiery and
exciting versions of these concertos, but
nonetheless he had high praise for this
version. Bear with me here: in a rather
obscure sense, how very odd it is to compare
one performance with another. A work of art -
a performance - either succeeds on its own
merits or it does not. Each is unique. This is
what I have to work with, these are the rules
under which I work: integrity is all.
Mendelssohn said music is too precise a
language to be put into words.
Russell Lichter
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