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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL CONCERT REVIEW
Schubert, Reger:
Yaara Tal and Andreas Groethuysen (Piano Duo) Herkulessaal, Munich
14.11.2007 (JFL)
Yaara Tal and Andreas Groethuysen
Schubert: Fugue in e-minor D952 (1828)
Schubert: Allegro in a-minor D947 (1828)
Schubert: Rondo in A-major D951 (1828)
Schubert: Deux Marches caractéristiques in C-major D886 (1826)
Reger: Organ Suite e-minor op.16, Reger’s version for Four Hands
Piano (1896)
Presented as part of “Konzerte
in der Residenz”, this music-making example of German-Israeli
friendship offered the whimsical Fugue in e-minor D952 by Franz
Schubert and still made it sound like great music – or at any rate
an integral part of a great evening of piano playing. The little,
invariably charming Fugue has a Bach-like appeal and served as
part bookend, part teaser to the imposing and Bach-sodden e-minor
Organ Suite by Max Reger that occupied the entire second half of
the program.
In order to keep the balance between the Reger suite and the first
half of Schubert works intact, Yaara Tal suggested that their
mélange of the Fugue, the Allegro in a-minor D947 (“Lebensstürme”),
the Rondo in A-major D951, and the “Two characteristic marches” in
C-major D886 be considered – and treated, applause-wise – as a
whole.
That approach worked well enough and sandwiched the two
spectacular works in the key of A between those lighter pieces.
The Allegro, though it grabs you right off the bat, is not
all “Sturm & Drang”, as the title might suggest. In parts,
it rather resembles the sweetly ethereal quality that also makes
the f-minor Fantasy D940 so attractive. The Rondo, not as long as
either the famous Fantasy or the Allegro, is no less an
ingenious work. All three are among the absolutely finest
compositions that Schubert wrote, even if nothing in the piano duo
genre is generally thought to occupy the same lofty realms that
works in “serious” forms, such as the symphony or string quartet
or (solo) piano sonata, do.
But as if beautifully performed Schubertian gorgeousness wasn’t
enough, the Reger – charmingly, effectively, and efficiently
introduced by Andreas Groethuysen – was yet a more powerful
experience. It may not have been played as flawlessly as the
Schubert. But the depth and passion, the enthusiasm and the vigor
with which Yaara Tal and her German bench-mate dug into this
complex, roughly 40 minute long organ sonata, self-transcribed for
Piano Four Hands by Reger, was nothing short of awesome.
The sonata is the fruit of Reger's depressions, troubles, and
thwarted ambitions – and also the answer to them. After
transcribing many organ works of Bach, his musical God (to whose
Manes this sonata is dedicated), he must have felt like it
was time for a great organ work of his own. And from the first
note on you can hear the “grand statement” or at least the forced
and determined will toward that grand statement. The
Introduzione. Grave – Fuga. Allegro ma non tanto opens with
its theme that itself sounds like several Bach fragments placed
after one another. A more gentle second theme and counterpoint
eventually gets thrown together with the first for a quixotic
Fugue that then leads into the second movement Adagio which
is made of three more or less recognizable Bach-chorales. Again,
you cannot shake the feeling that every bit of romantic suffering
has been dumped into Bachian forms here by the bucket load – but
if that should sound disrespectful at all, it’s not meant as an
indictment. Quite the opposite: the work – and played as
empathically and handsomely as did Tal & Groethuysen – is pure,
stern, serious, head-bopping and foot-tapping (preferably not
during a live recital) fun.
A lovely scherzo-like Intermezzo provides the least heavy
moment before Reger lunges himself into a Passacaglia of
proportions second only to BWV 582 and just about as compelling,
unstoppable, and inevitable as its great model, too. The encore
was cut of a similar cloth: Brahms second of the “Herzlich tut
mich verlangen nach einem selgen End” choral preludes op.122. It
is conjecture but rather plausible that Brahms was inspired to
this, his last work, by Reger having sent him the score of his
sonata. Reger, too, used that chorale from BWV 727 in his organ
work.
Jens F. Laurson
Picture © Tal and Groethuysen