Mozart’s Piano Concerto 
                No. 15 is like a carnival parade of elegant floats. There’s a 
                profusion of themes, four distinct ones in the orchestral introduction. 
                Christopher Hogwood’s introduction is light and playful, Robert 
                Levin’s fortepiano can be heard providing accompaniment, all in 
                gentle accord. This is not any fortepiano, either. On this CD 
                are the first concerto performances using Mozart’s own concert 
                instrument, built by Anton Walter in Vienna around 1780. It has 
                a small, glistening tone, more like a harpsichord than later fortepianos 
                with a more subtle and subdued colouring. This makes it neatly 
                incisive with the orchestra but the important thing is that the 
                orchestral effects are kept in scale with the piano, so the emphasis 
                is on refinement of expression. This in any case matches the character 
                of the work where what is the second main theme (tr. 1 3:25) is 
                proposed by the piano only as a gambit for flights of fancy.
                
                The slow movement is here presented as a warmly sensitive theme, 
                like a song of thanksgiving. It seems complete in itself, presented 
                by strings with a solo piano repeat with delicately added embellishment, 
                and additional touches provided by Levin yet in keeping with the 
                whole. But then a second, more aspiring strain appears with its 
                own tasteful climax and release. A second novelty of this CD, 
                apart from Mozart’s fortepiano, is the inclusion on track 7 of 
                the original version of this movement in which the theme is darker 
                in colour, more austere and ruminative, less vocal. You’ll prefer 
                Mozart’s revision which is the familiar version (tr. 2) but it’s 
                rewarding to be able to realize the improvements he achieved. 
                The structure is unchanged, as is the coda. After the first full 
                presentation of the theme you get a first variation (tr. 2 1:27) 
                which initially has the piano floating arpeggios above the strings. 
                The second variation (2:53) allows the piano still more free rein 
                while the orchestra keeps the theme brightly in focus. Here the 
                revision is a more airy improvement on the fussier original. The 
                coda (4:38) seems to enfold itself in growing intimacy – all to 
                magical effect.
                
                For the rondo finale Mozart supplies one of his catchiest tunes 
                giving rise to the raciest elaboration, especially in this performance. 
                It’s felicitously cheerful with the extra fillip of a flute added 
                to the orchestra for the first time in this or any Mozart piano 
                concerto, a wonderful flurry of notes that seems more sheer exuberance 
                than virtuosity, while the second subsidiary theme (tr. 3 1:47) 
                has a sudden wealth of contentment which nevertheless blends with 
                the overall bold sweep. Levin and Hogwood make it all sparkle 
                yet with more than a hint of mischief. Just admire how the oboe 
                copies the piano’s ornamentation from 4:22 which the Barenreiter 
                urtext does not require, then admire further the extra ornamentation 
                of the rondo theme Levin provides from 4:36, again in keeping 
                with the whole mood.
              I compared the 1984 
                recording by Malcolm Bilson and The English Baroque Soloists/John 
                Eliot Gardiner (Archiv 463 111-2). Here are the comparative timings:
                
                   
                    |  
                       Timings    
                     | 
                     
                          I    
                     | 
                     
                       II 
                     | 
                     
                       III      
                     | 
                     
                       Total 
                     | 
                  
                   
                    |  
                       Levin & Hogwood 
                     | 
                     
                       11:16 
                     | 
                     
                       5:25   
                     | 
                     
                       7:49 
                     | 
                     
                       24:30 
                     | 
                  
                   
                    |  
                       Bilson & Gardiner 
                     | 
                     
                       10:18  
                     | 
                     
                       5:05   
                     | 
                     
                       7:50 
                     | 
                     
                       23:13 
                     | 
                  
                
                
              Bilson’s fortepiano is a copy by Philip Belt of Mozart’s instrument 
              – the one that Levin plays. It appears to have a fuller bodied tone, 
              perhaps because the recording of piano and orchestra is closer. 
              I prefer L’Oiseau-Lyre’s slightly greater distance. Bilson and Gardiner’s 
              approach is more measured and courtly, less frolicsome than Levin 
              and Hogwood’s. Bilson’s second main theme is more casually suave. 
              He plays Mozart’s cadenza which is a neat reflection of the themes 
              blended with virtuosity. Levin decorates the pause at the end of 
              his first solo substantially (tr. 1 2:11 to 2:27), trying out cheeky 
              variants of the first theme before playing it solo for the first 
              time. His phrasing glides with more individuality and unpredictability 
              than Bilson’s. His second main theme is warmer and more reflective, 
              his development (4:58) more thoughtful and with an insistent momentum 
              about it. Levin plays his own cadenza which offers a boisterous 
              start and notable recall of the introduction’s third theme set in 
              a dramatic context.  
              
Bilson and Gardiner’s 
                slow movement is of restrained, classically poised reflection 
                with an abstract quality to the variations. Though slightly slower, 
                Hogwood’s introductions have more warmth and Levin’s piano responses 
                more flow. There’s a more involved continuity about the variations 
                and the coda contrasts more distinctly the piano’s delicacy against 
                the orchestra’s crescendos of potential foreboding. In the finale 
                Bilson and Gardiner are bright, blithe and clean-cut yet more 
                polite than the racier, more breezy approach of Levin and Hogwood, 
                with twinkling lighter piano tone. Even though there’s no difference 
                in timing Levin and Hogwood have more swing to the presentation 
                of the rondo theme and zip to the whole. Bilson plays Mozart’s 
                decoration at the pause before the rondo theme’s return and Mozart’s 
                cadenza which concentrates on the rondo theme, especially in the 
                bass. Levin’s own decoration combines bravura and poetic reflection 
                while his cadenza meditates warmly on the first subsidiary theme 
                - first heard at tr. 3 0:48 - and toys musingly with the rondo 
                theme before a firework display of pianism. Levin’s interpolations 
                suit his performance as convincingly as Mozart’s make an impressive 
                part of Bilson’s.
                Piano Concerto No. 
                  26 gets its nickname because it was performed just after the 
                  coronation of Leopold II. The work was then two years old and 
                  it sounds as though woodwind, horns, trumpets and timpani parts 
                  were added to a concerto in which the piano only interplays 
                  with the strings, at least in the first movement. In the orchestral 
                  introduction here there’s a thrill of anticipation and then 
                  weighty blasts, especially from the drums. By contrast there’s 
                  the protracted graceful lead into the perky second theme (tr. 
                  4 1:05) and playful third one (1:43). Levin presents the piano 
                  solo version of the opening theme directly and neatly leading 
                  to an easy succession of cascading scales. Suddenly more probing, 
                  even troubled, is a piano theme not previously heard (3:42). 
                  Levin and Hogwood ride out with bravado a development (6:55) 
                  based just on the closing cadence of the exposition. Levin’s 
                  own cadenza blends well the virtuosic scamper and the contrasts 
                  of mood between the orchestra’s second theme and piano’s probing 
                  one.
                Levin and Hogwood 
                  get across well the inbuilt repose and contemplation of the 
                  slow movement without being too static. Notable is the delicacy 
                  Levin applies to the climax of the theme’s second section (tr. 
                  5 1:25). Also welcome is his decoration added to the theme’s 
                  returns, relieving those four crotchets on E with which it opens. 
                  In the rondo finale Levin shows delicacy and fluency while Hogwood 
                  provides sprightly back-up. The rondo theme is neatly and daintily 
                  treated by Levin and Hogwood but the piano’s second theme (tr. 
                  6 1:14) is more strikingly regal and proves the essence of the 
                  development as it moves from major to minor (5:25), mirroring 
                  the treatment of the second main theme (2:22) introduced in 
                  the minor by orchestra but repeated by piano in the major.
                I compared the 1986 
                  recording by Malcolm Bilson and The English Baroque Soloists/John 
                  Eliot Gardiner (Archiv 463 111-2). Here are the comparative 
                  timings:
                
                   
                    |  
                       Timings    
                     | 
                     
                          I    
                     | 
                     
                       II 
                     | 
                     
                       III      
                     | 
                     
                       Total 
                     | 
                  
                   
                    |  
                       Levin & Hogwood 
                     | 
                     
                       13:47 
                     | 
                     
                       6:35   
                     | 
                     
                       11:09 
                     | 
                     
                       31:31 
                     | 
                  
                   
                    |  
                       Bilson & Gardiner 
                     | 
                     
                       13:42  
                     | 
                     
                       5:46   
                     | 
                     
                       10:40 
                     | 
                     
                       30:08 
                     | 
                  
                
                Bilson and Gardiner’s 
                  first movement is more stylish and formal, more consciously 
                  crafted. Bilson’s emphasis is on mellifluousness so the piano 
                  theme (tr. 5 3:42), to which Levin gives more edge, Bilson smoothes 
                  over. Levin and Hogwood are more eager with more emphasis on 
                  momentum, sunny strings and bright full orchestra passages. 
                  Levin’s phrasing is more individual than Bilson’s.
 
              Bilson and Gardiner’s pacier slow movement makes it more ingenuously 
              contented while there’s more urgency to the central section. Levin 
              and Hogwood have a more reflective quality, more savouring the essence 
              of the contentment, for example giving more allure to the orchestra’s 
              chromatic descents (tr. 2 2:05) and more relaxation to the central 
              section. Levin’s 30 second linking passage (3:50) is more reflective 
              than Bilson’s 12 second simplicity which, however, works well in 
              its surroundings. Bilson and Gardiner’s pacy finale strongly 
              contrasts a slightly toying piano rondo theme and bouncy orchestral 
              repeat. Similarly Bilson points up his major version of the orchestra’s 
              second main theme in the minor but the piano’s independent second 
              theme is smoothed over. The more intimate tone of Mozart’s own instrument 
              makes more contrast with the orchestra while Hogwood’s accompaniment 
              is bracing and soothing by turns with an ambience that’s more spirited 
              than Gardiner’s disciplined authority. Levin’s daring linking passages 
              (tr. 6 4:03, 8:36) and greater and varied use of ornamentation at 
              the returns of the rondo theme make these fresher. So the novel 
              use of Mozart’s instrument which meant recording in Salzburg is 
              vindicated by the fresh and creative approach to the interpretations. 
              The Arkiv CD under review doesn’t have booklet notes but I gather 
              all future releases will and existing releases are gradually 
              being upgraded. 
              
Michael Greenhalgh