Biddulph keeps 
                      up its perceptive retrieval of hard-to-trace Francescatti-Casadesus 
                      recordings. The two Beethoven sonatas are not to be confused 
                      with the slightly later stereo remakes, and they complete 
                      the mono recordings that the two Frenchmen left behind – 
                      they never recorded the cycle in mono though they did in 
                      stereo (the mono Nos 7, 8 and 9 are on Biddulph 80210). 
                    
                    Biddulph claims 
                      that the Mozart sonata was never released commercially by 
                      American Columbia at the time – which is true – but I was 
                      under the impression that the same was the case with the 
                      Bach. If so the acoustic may account for a reluctance to 
                      issue it, as it’s rather swimmy and it catches a rather 
                      on/off tone from the violinist. This is grand, old school 
                      Bach playing, full of expression in slow movements and exceptionally 
                      clean technically. Francescatti’s at his most winning in 
                      the intensity of the third movement Andante. 
                    Despite the 
                      distinction of his Concerto recordings Francescatti only 
                      recorded one Mozart sonata with Casadesus. It’s rather dullishly 
                      recorded and airless which might be a contributing facture 
                      to its having been held back. Maybe someone also took a 
                      good long listen to the leaden introduction to the slow 
                      movement – a terrible miscalculation for so authoritative 
                      a Mozartian pairing - and agreed that whilst the subsequent 
                      cantabile playing is august it doesn’t compensate for the 
                      misjudgement. 
                    On balance however 
                      it’s the two Beethoven sonatas in which we find the best 
                      playing. Try the buoyancy of the opening of the E flat sonata 
                      and the increasingly ardent expression of its Adagio. Or 
                      listen to the splendid ensemble in the A minor with its 
                      difficult rhythmic machinations in the central movement. 
                      Or indeed the violinist’s coiled tone in the outer movements, 
                      so impressively tensile yet without any harshness.
                    I once swore 
                      to ram this message home whenever Biddulph produced their 
                      cavalierly unhelpful booklets devoid of all matrix and release 
                      details – but then lost heart. Well, there’s no excuse for 
                      it here; Francescatti and Casadesus re-recorded the Beethoven 
                      sonatas in stereo as we know but the browser really doesn’t 
                      want to trawl through the notes to find out which is mono 
                      and which stereo. Does Biddulph think it sexy to dispense 
                      with all this anoraky old stuff – is that it? I can’t believe 
                      Eric Wen really thinks so.
                    Jonathan 
                      Woolf