Two colleagues (Reinhart; 
      Clements) 
      have already extensively reviewed this collection of HJ Lim’s recording 
      of the Beethoven sonata cycle, from which she excludes the Op.49 duo, to 
      leave a bare thirty. Given that they have done so, my remarks are rather 
      on the lines of particular observations, though I have listened to all her 
      sonata performances.
       
      Verve and vitality mark out her playing. Her devices may strike one as Old 
      School taken to excess, or they may seem simply daring and new. Whatever 
      one’s viewpoint, the Pathétique’s first movement is subject to 
      a veritable battery of metric displacements and rhythmic manipulations to 
      such an extent that the rhythm never settles. Worse, and more damaging, 
      one can anticipate what Lim has on her mind and the predictability of her 
      caprice becomes unattractive. Her left hand’s busyness and incursiveness 
      in the second movement is accompanied by constant and extreme tempo fluctuation 
      — at one point she even halves the tempo. By the finale, regrettably, the 
      performance has long since become wearying.
       
      The Appassionata again embodies powerful contrasts, though here 
      her rhythm is stricter. The slow movement is certainly strongly sculpted 
      but it doesn’t become especially expressive. The finale certainly reveals 
      a strong technique but it is expressed in a rather truculent way and is 
      disfigured by some Lisztian italicising and caustic declamation. The Waldstein 
      attests to the clarity of her passagework but comes at a real cost of making 
      the music sound more like finger exercises than real music-making. Hold 
      on for the finale where some exaggerated dynamics are accompanied by Rock 
      ’n’ Roll rhythm. In the Moonlight, played with refined touch, her 
      delicate retardation of the rhythm is sufficient to impede legato phrasing; 
      meanwhile there’s vehemence in the dramatic finale. Youthfully brusque, 
      the Hammerklavier shows finer things; a bright tone, unsentimental 
      phrasing, to a fault indeed, and a reasonable grasp of the complexities 
      of the music.
       
      The last sonatas are marked by real fleetness of tempo. The finale of Op.109 
      is very direction and goal-orientated, whilst the Arietta of Op.111 
      is driven very hard, as is the corresponding finale of the earlier Op.101. 
      Her performance of Op.78 is altogether more convincing in this respect and 
      Op.27 No.1 shakes and shimmers with real vigour and energy.
       
      She has assembled the sonatas thematically, not chronologically. Thus the 
      first volume —each of the four CDs is a twofer, thus there are eight CDs 
      altogether—contains ‘The Heroic Ideals’, and takes in the Hammerklavier, 
      Op.22 and Les Adieux, the last of which receives an intermittently 
      compelling reading. ‘Eternal Feminine — Youth’ gives us Opp.7, 14 No.1 and 
      14 No.2, 27 and the Moonlight (Op.27 No.2).
       
      The recording quality is reasonable, and captures Lim’s Yamaha with fidelity, 
      though it’s not an instrument dripping with warmth. These pugnacious, fast, 
      excitable and unevenly successful performances chart the work-in-progress 
      of a gifted 24 year old pianist. I’m sure this will not be her last word 
      on the sonatas.
       
      Jonathan Woolf
       
      I’m sure that this will not be Lim’s last word on the sonatas.
       
      Disc details
      Volume 1
      CD 1
      Theme I: Heroic Ideals
      No. 29 in B flat major op. 106 ‘Hammerklavier’ (1817-18) [37:22]
      No. 11 in B flat major op. 22 (1800) [26:29]
      No. 26 in E flat major op. 81A "Les Adieux" (1809-10) [14:33]
      CD 2
      Theme II: Eternal Feminine - Youth
      No. 4 in E flat major op. 7 (1796-7) [24:21]
      No. 9 in E major op. 14 no. 1 (1798) [11:59]
      No. 10 in G major op. 14 no. 2 (1799) [13:55]
      No. 13 in E flat major op. 27 no. 1 (1800-01) [13:14]
      No. 14 in C sharp minor op. 27 no. 2 ‘Moonlight’ (1801) [13:54]
      
      Volume 2
      CD 1
      Theme 3: Assertion of an inflexible personality
      No. 1 in F minor op. 2 no. 1 (1793-5) [15:40]
      No. 2 in A major op. 2 no. 2 (1794-5) [19:40]
      No. 3 in C major op. 2 no. 3 (1794-5) [23:35]
      CD 2
      Theme 4: Nature
      No. 15 in D major op. 28 ‘Pastorale’ (1801) [22:08]
      No. 21 in C major op. 53 ‘Waldstein’ (1803-04) [22:54]
      No. 22 in F major op. 54 (1804) [9:47]
      No. 25 in G major op. 79 (1809) [7:48]
      
      Volume 3
      CD 1
      Theme 5: Extremes in collision
      No. 5 in C minor op. 10 no. 1 (1795-7) [16:01]
      No. 6 in F major op. 10 no. 2 (1796-7) [11:41]
      No. 7 in D major op. 10 no. 3 (1797-8) [18:00]
      CD 2
      Theme 6: Resignation and action
      No. 16 in G major op. 31 no. 1 (1802) [20:14]
      No. 17 in D minor op. 31 no. 2 ‘Tempest’ (1802) [20:32]
      No. 18 in E flat major op. 31 no. 3 (1802) [20:23]
      No. 28 in A major op. 101 (1816) [18:41]
      
      Volume 4
      CD 1
      Theme 7: Eternal Feminine - Maturity
      No. 24 in F sharp major op. 78 (1809) [9:02]
      No. 27 in E minor op. 90 (1814) [11:44]
      No. 30 in E major op. 109 (1820) [16:35]
      No. 31 in A flat major op. 110 (1821-22) [16:33]
      CD 2
      Theme 8: Destiny
      No. 8 in C minor op. 13 ‘Pathétique’ (1797-8) [17:09]
      No. 12 in A flat major op. 26 ‘Funeral March’ (1800-01) [16:54]
      No. 23 in F minor op. 57 ‘Appassionata’ (1804-05) [22:37]
      No. 32 in C minor op. 111 (1821-22) [23:16]
    
       
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