Having just suffered Joshua Bell's ghastly performance
of the Beethoven at the 2002 Proms I have turned to this elegant and
exquisite performance recorded in 1999.
It must be emphasised that a poor performance can damage
a work even if played by a star. Bell's performance was riddled with
strange tempi, an awful first movement cadenza which was stylistically
opposed to Beethoven and instead of taking the usual 42 minutes his
performance was 12% overlong. The finale stopped and started and, as
one critic described, was like torn washing hanging on a sagging line.
Hahn 's performance has none of these faults and it
is the best recording I have heard for a very long time.
Firstly, because it is pure Beethoven. The performers
give us what is written and as in Hahn's Bach recital you can follow
the printed music since it is faithfully realised.
Secondly, there is no excess, no empty gesture, no
playing to the gallery, no showmanship, no eccentricities just glorious
Beethoven.
Zinman starts the proceedings with a wonderful controlled
orchestral opening. When the soloist enters it is not in an exaggerated
blaze of pomp ( Look at me, I'm the soloist! ... not a bit of it). It
is so natural. The intonation is perfect, the variety of colour simply
spellbinding and every detail is there as Beethoven indicated.
Recently I have been told that no performers still
religiously adhere to the score and that all take some byways or advantages.
Rubbish! You will find none here!
The legato playing from soloist and orchestra is amazingly
good. The climaxes are very well done flowing naturally from the music.
The balance and the recorded sound is excellent.
What I also admire is the wonderful way that the main
theme of the opening movement is captured in all its beauty with what
I have always considered a hint of sadness. One does not usually refer
to Beethoven's music as moving, but this is. The quiet episode eleven
minutes in is so beautiful that only a hard hearted individual would
fail to respond to its ethereal beauty. The accompaniment in the orchestra
is truly superb.
The soloist writes, "The Beethoven is, for me, one
of the supreme compositions written for any instrument, and its seamless
combination of high lyricism and dramatic depth has appealed to me since
the first time I heard it."
I have often thought the work to be autobiographical.
The opening drum beats are heart-beats. It is Beethoven's heart and
despite all the criticisms of him he had a good heart. The range of
emotions in this perfect work are varied and the joyous conclusion seems
so at odds with Beethoven's tragic life.
Yet Hahn does not pile on any emotion. It just flows.
Its simple utterance is all the more touching. It is when the Joshua
Bells' of this world want to over-dramatise it and stretch it out that
the music loses its power.
The work was not well received at its first performances.
Critics said it had a continuity problem. In other words, it did not
flow. Yes I have heard performances like that but this is not one of
them.
In my days as a school teacher I found that children
who knew nothing about real music (a recent report states that 65% of
children cannot name one classical composer) loved this piece which
surprised me. But then in 1844 the 12 year old Joseph Joachim played
it in London under the baton of Mendelssohn. He played it hundreds of
times and supplied cadenzas. In this recording Hahn plays the choice
cadenza of Fritz Kreisler.
I have often complained about music where nothing happens
and I could name several pieces here. I won't, but the famous quote
about the novels of Jane Austen comes to mind, "They move as fast as
a fly in a glue bottle."
The larghetto is a type of soliloquy. Nothing much
happens. Its construction is so simple yet the music is never banal.
It is introspective. It is Beethoven into personal self assessment but
how lovely this movement is played. It soars, it sighs and it is almost
heavenly.
The Rondo is in high spirits and Hahn keeps it moving.
Mr Bell take note! It is full of wit and thoroughly satisfying.
I liked Leonard Bernstein as a man although I suffered
from passive smoking because of him. He was loquacious and the great
communicator. This serenade is another self portrait (I think) and is
an entertainment or a divertimento. At that time, (early 1950s) Bernstein
was also undergoing a self assessment and reading Plato. He did not
know whether he wanted to be a conductor, a composer or a writer of
musicals. Fortunately he stuck to all three and while people may applaud
West Wide Story as his musical masterpiece I rate On the Town as his
finest.
Lenny should have called this work Symposium after
Plato. The philosophers appear as the 'characters' in the piece. Phaedrus
praises Eros the god of love, Aristophanes is the story teller, Eryximachus
talks about the science of love (has everything got to be understood
scientifically?), Agathon tells of love's power and Socrates visits
Diotima being interested in her speech on love. What follows is a Greek
orgy or a New York dinner party with elements of jazz and seedy music.
The music is hugely enjoyable being very entertaining
and very well written. The use of bells in the exhilarating first movement
is splendid. It is beautifully played.
If I must make a minor criticism it is that it is a
hybrid work. But it does show us something of the genius of Lenny who,
in my view, was a greater composer than Copland, Harris, Gershwin and
many other Americans.
But this is the best Beethoven Violin Concerto recording.
Of that I cannot be gainsaid.
David Wright