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SEEN AND HEARD
UK CONCERT REVIEW
Janáček, Brahms, Ysaÿe, and Franck:
Joshua Bell (violin), Jeremy Denk (piano), Wigmore Hall,
London,
26.3.2009 (MB)
Janáček – Sonata for violin and piano
Brahms – Sonata for violin and piano no.3 in D minor, op.108
Ysaÿe – Sonata for solo violin in A minor, op.27 no.2, ‘Obsession’
Franck – Sonata for violin and piano in A major
Ultimately this proved a frustrating recital. It boasted many good
thing, yet not only did they fail to come together as a convincing
whole, but one also became aware of a number of artistic
limitations, particularly with respect to Joshua Bell’s performance.
Janáček’s violin sonata is, at the best of times, not an easy work
to render coherent. Here,
Bell often seemed to act more as a soloist than as a chamber
musician, which, given his experience in the world of chamber music,
came as something of a surprise. He looked at his partner, Jeremy
Denk, far more when the violin was silent than when called upon to
play, whereas Denk proved extremely attentive. There could be no
faulting the technique of either musician but Bell was rather too
ready, especially during the opening movement, to employ a seemingly
all-purpose Romantic tone. Denk sounded more alert to the
idiosyncrasies of the composer’s style. He provided a nicely
rippling opening to the following Ballada. Though still
somewhat on the Romantic side,
Bell
now seemed more sensitive to shifts of mood – and Romanticism is
probably more appropriate to this movement in any case. Shades of
Debussyan harmony were brought out, and with a good dose of passion
rather than haze. The third movement was strongly characterised by
fragments of distorted dance rhythms, reminiscent of the troika
music in Katya Kabanova and looking forward also to the
Sinfonietta.
Bell’s
double-stopping was flawless, although the music did not always seem
to have penetrated under his skin. The fourth movement had a real
sense of chamber music, the musical ‘lead’ passed between the
instruments according to the imperatives of work and performance. I
very much liked the musical question marks posed by the uncertain
violin interventions, not least that with which the sonata ended.
Denk provided arresting piano tremolos, igniting a passionate
response from both musicians in an unsuccessful – which is as it
should be – attempt to climax.
The third of Brahms’s violin sonatas opened once again with an
uncertainty of idiom. Denk’s role here was once again more
impressive, presenting clear textures without loss to the piano
part’s complex richness. By contrast,
Bell’s tone often sounded inappropriately light. At home with the
lyrical side of Brahms’s inspiration –
Bell
can certainly spin a long line – the reading often lacked depth,
although the half-light of the first movement’s coda provided subtly
menacing shadows. The following Adagio was presented as a
song without words: not without a proto-Elgarian nobility but rarely
penetrating to the intricacies of Brahms’s serial foreshadowings.
The third movement fared better. Its ghostliness was possessed of an
unusual serenity, albeit punctuated by truly Romantic outbursts.
There was an almost Schumannesque schizophrenia, within certain
bounds, rendering the scherzo more of a Romantic ‘character piece’,
or perhaps dual character piece, than is usually the case. In the
finale, Denk proved adept at reminding us of the echoes of the
previous movement. Yet, here the welcome clarity he brought to his
part was married to an undue lightness of tone. He sounded a little
too Mendelssohnian. Bell’s rendition of the violin part was
technically flawless but I wanted a greater rawness, if not of tone,
then at least of emotion.
Where
Bell really did come into his own was in the solo Ysaÿe sonata. The
opening Prélude brought forth immediate echoes of Bach,
leading into a duly obsessive hearing of the Dies irae chant.
The fascinating second movement, Malinconia, seemed somehow –
and without taking the obvious route of eschewing vibrato – to evoke
the mid-Baroque world of melancholy Affekt. There was nothing
showy to
Bell’s
performance; indeed, it proved unfailingly musical. The Dies irae
here sounded as if refracted through the evocation of a consort of
viols. After the sweet pizzicato opening of the following
Danse des ombres, there was again something intriguingly alte
about the ensuing Musik, a splendid antidote to the
glossiness of so many performances of such repertoire. The music
then grew into something more Romantic, as if the listener were
being taken on a guided tour of the history of the violin, with an
appropriate nod to Paganini at the appropriate juncture. This led
seamlessly into the final movement, Les Furies, in which Bell
could prove himself the very model of a modern violin virtuoso,
whilst hinting at a modernism, especially of harmony and its
implications, often overlooked in the music of Ysaÿe.
Franck’s sonata proved, like much of what had gone before, something
of a curate’s egg. Denk imparted a surprisingly impressionistic
tinge to his opening bars, the harmonies sounding stranger than
usual. However, the first movement as a whole lacked the necessary
security of harmonic direction, veering between those intriguing, if
ultimately not quite convincing, hints of Debussy and a somewhat
over-the-top Romanticism. One might well say that Franck’s elusive
idiom lies somewhere in between the two; perhaps so, but it does not
really lie in alternation between them.
Bell’s violin often sounded disconnected from the piano part, not in
the sense of a lack of synchronisation but rather as if he were
playing to a pre-recorded ‘accompaniment’. The second movement
opened with a wonderfully Tristan-esque bent to the melodic
lines, to some extent prefigured before but now given fuller – and
convincing – rein. Romanticism was spot on in this case, although
the central section sounded, ironically, more like Brahms in D minor
than much of Brahms in D minor had. I liked the improvisatory
feeling to the beginning of the Recitative-Fantasia,
evocative of the organist ‘preluding’ upon previous given themes.
However, even at his most ardent,
Bell’s
lyricism was not really matched by sufficient depth of tone. If the
musicians were not entirely able to mask the repetitive nature of
Franck’s cyclical form here and in the finale, the fault is not
really theirs. One again had a sense in the final movement of a
soloist and accompanist rather than true chamber music. This was not
entirely
Bell’s
fault, for there were times when Denk could have been rather less
delicately reticent. As so often in this recital, the whole was not
a great deal more than the sum of its variable parts.
Mark Berry
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