  | 
            | 
         
         
          |  
               
            
   
            
 alternatively 
              CD: MDT 
              AmazonUK 
              AmazonUS 
              Sound 
              Samples & Downloads   | 
            Ludwig van BEETHOVEN 
              (1770-1827)  
              Piano Sonata No 30, Op. 109 in E major [19:14]  
              Piano Sonata No 31, Op. 110 in A flat major [20:22]  
              Piano Sonata No 32, Op. 111 in C minor [26:22]  
                
              Alexei Lubimov (pianoforte, Alois Graff, 1828)  
              rec. 14-15 July 2009, United Mennonite Church, Haarlem, The Netherlands 
               
                
              ZIG-ZAG TERRITOIRES ZZT110103 [65:58]   
           | 
         
         
          |  
            
           | 
         
         
           
             
               
                 
                  We are now officially spoiled for choice in period-pianoforte 
                  performances of Ludwig van Beethoven’s last three sonatas. 
                  Ronald Brautigam on BIS, Paul Komen on Globe, and now Alexei 
                  Lubimov on Zig-Zag are a distinguished trio. Their performances 
                  are all very good, and all in very different ways.  
                     
                  To begin with Lubimov: this is a highly individual account, 
                  and if I was a little disappointed in some places, it was only 
                  because Lubimov’s glowing Schubert readings set the bar 
                  so high. His pacing is a little eccentric in the slow first 
                  movement of Op. 109 and the hesitating allegro molto 
                  of Op 110, and the syncopated “fast” variation in 
                  the last sonata’s arietta sadly falls flat. Elsewhere, 
                  though, he does very well; the poet with a great ear for rubato 
                  is in evidence at the beginning of the A flat sonata’s 
                  adagio, and in the luminous final variations of Op 109, the 
                  fortepiano singing despite its short sustained notes.  
                     
                  The other two readings available sit at opposite ends of a spectrum 
                  in which Lubimov might be seen as the moderate figure. Paul 
                  Komen has a gorgeous-sounding Graf piano with a dark, rich night-time 
                  timbre, slightly less pearly than Lubimov’s and a little 
                  tinkly in the top registers. He doesn’t hesitate to take 
                  advantage in Op. 111, the final arietta of which expands out 
                  to 18 minutes, but his quick movements never lack bite - indeed 
                  he’s faster everywhere else than Lubimov. Fast is not 
                  to say insensitive: Op. 109 begins with delicately voiced rolls 
                  of notes - this is how it’s done! - and some of its final 
                  variations (as at 5:30) are magically sung. The fugue in Op. 
                  110 feels rather fast - but then, Beethoven did mark a tempo 
                  jolt from adagio to allegro. Komen takes him literally. His 
                  Op. 111 is one of my reference versions on any instrument: the 
                  first movement strikes a balance between relentless middle-period 
                  sturm und drang and moments of calming repose. The arietta 
                  is a transcendent reading, with delightful snap and energy when 
                  called for and a simply divine touch, lighter than you’d 
                  think possible on pianoforte, after 11:00.  
                     
                  Ronald Brautigam’s traversal, on a modern Paul McNulty 
                  instrument after an 1819 Graf, enjoys a piano which is both 
                  clear and light in action and warm in tone - only a bit more 
                  percussive than Komen’s. Brautigam sails through the fast 
                  movements with aplomb and virtuoso technique; his style is to 
                  compensate for the instrument’s less powerful sustain 
                  by playing quickly but lightly. The opening movement of Op. 
                  109 is a little miracle, as is the powerful close of Op. 110, 
                  in both of which the cascades of notes never blur. The Op. 109 
                  variations are just 11 minutes in duration, Op. 111’s 
                  not even 15, to Lubimov’s 12:39 and 17, and in truth the 
                  whole final sonata does feel a bit too fast. It’s not 
                  rushed, indeed it feels quite natural, but the arietta is not 
                  ideally contemplative and the first movement is unrelenting 
                  in its fierceness.  
                     
                  I would say, then, that what we have here are three distinguished 
                  competitors indeed. Alexei Lubimov takes a very honorable bronze: 
                  his eccentricities at certain junctures, like the first bar 
                  of Op. 109, are minor blemishes on a poetic, very individual 
                  achievement. Brautigam does make a superb impression in Op. 
                  109, and Komen is consistently my favorite interpreter of the 
                  three, but there are moments in Lubimov’s readings which 
                  are to be treasured. I’ll be glad to keep it on the shelf, 
                  especially with nigh-ideal acoustics, not as boomy as one might 
                  expect from the church venue but also not close enough to capture 
                  the clicks of the instrument’s actions.  
                     
                  Zig-Zag have unnecessarily introduced a fly in the ointment 
                  with their odd tracking; the Op. 110 sonata is split across 
                  four tracks, helpfully, but the Op. 109 is compressed into just 
                  two, the shorter opening movements stuck together. What’s 
                  that for? Why the inconsistency? This doesn’t actually 
                  impact the playing on any equipment I know of, but it does leave 
                  my obsessive-compulsive side a little displeased.  
                     
                  As I’ve finished writing this review, another disc has 
                  arrived for review - another set of Opp. 109-111, on another 
                  Graf fortepiano, played by Penelope Crawford. The original suggestion 
                  that we are now spoiled for choice is now even more true. Paul 
                  Komen on Globe might still be my top choice here, but for the 
                  fortepiano devotee there are now four excellent artists, on 
                  four good instruments, and all of them are well worth hearing. 
                  Watch this space.  
                     
                  Brian Reinhart   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
           | 
         
       
     
     |