The enigmatic pianist
Artur Schnabel (1882-1951) was born
in Lipnik, a village on the Austrian-Polish
border. He studied with Theodore Leschetizky
in Vienna and from 1898 pursued his
career in Berlin, becoming a leading
chamber music performer and later devoting
most of his time to the solo piano repertoire
and to composition.
Through the 1920s and
1930s Schnabel was recognised as the
leading authority on Beethoven’s piano
music. He published an idiosyncratic
edition of the sonata scores, performed
all thirty-two in several cities, a
process that culminated in the production
of the first complete sonata set. It
was only with the greatest of reluctance
that Schnabel first agreed in 1931 to
embrace the new technology and make
recordings of his performances.
These performances
are taken from the original two hundred
and four 78 rpm sides which were released
on Schnabel’s Beethoven Sonata Society.
Using a pragmatic combination of computerised
processing, filtering and equalisation
Naxos sound restoration engineer Mark
Obert-Thorn has done a marvellous job.
Initially the surface noise was irritating
but my ears soon became acclimatised
to the transfers.
The performances are
radiant and I’m sure deeply considered
although there is a sense of real spontaneity
which enriches the whole listening experience.
The interpretation of the Piano Sonata
No.14 in C sharp minor "Moonlight" is
as fine as I have ever heard and sets
a most challenging bench-mark for other
performers.
Schnabel has certainly
proved that his reputation as a consummate
Beethoven interpreter is justified.
Michael Cookson
see also review
by Kevin Sutton and
Colin
Clarke