Sorry to be a pain, but there’s too much that won’t
do here. Not that the artists can’t play their instruments or anything
drastic like that, you understand, and the recording is fair enough,
though without any great bloom to it.
Much of it boils down to tempo. Take no. 2 first. The
first movement is marked "Allegro amabile" and, however much
"amabile" (lovingly) might be thought to qualify the "Allegro",
if it’s played "Andante", which to my ears it is, something
must be wrong. The mellow start is not unattractive, but then the passionate
outburst just 15 bars in simply has to move on a little, then the tempo
drops back and so it goes on. I don’t know if the players have been
conditioned by the popular image of the avuncular, ageing Brahms, but
whatever he may have looked like his heart beat more youthfully in old
age than it did when he wrote his early group of piano sonatas over
forty years before. This movement has a surging lyricism of which these
players seem unaware, and they make Brahms’s tight structure sound remarkably
rambling.
The outer sections of the "Allegro appassionato"
which stands as a scherzo go with a fair swing but goodness, what they
do with the trio. "Sostenuto", wrote Brahms, and yes, this
does mean holding back the tempo, but a holding back that keeps sight
of the original tempo, not a new one altogether. The music just has
no sense at this crawl, and to make matters worse Perl’s conception
is more vertical than horizontal, with each chord played separately,
as it were, and no singing legato line which alone might have saved
the day (Brahms asked for it to be "ben cantando" – very singingly).
This same chord-by-chord approach makes rather a trudge of the "Andante
con moto" which actually goes at a reasonable enough tempo. Having
launched the final "Allegro" with some energy, only a page
later the team are interpreting "Più tranquillo" once
again as an excuse to lose sight of the new tempo entirely.
The first sonata fares little better. The opening "Allegro
appassionato" is certainly not that, and Perl is often heavy-handed.
At the opening of the "Andante un poco adagio" not enough
care is taken by the pianist in enunciating the pervasive rocking quavers,
and the clarinettist does not give due weight to the final quaver of
the bar – small notes make all the difference in Brahms. The remaining
two movements are more successful and Manno does obtain something of
the graciousness Brahms asks for, though Perl remains heavier in his
response, his textures turgid and his rhythms inconclusive.
Not much of a bargain here, I’m afraid.
Christopher Howell