This disc is a reissue of recordings made ten 
                  years ago but has been only intermittently available since then. 
                  Roberte Mamou recorded the complete Mozart piano sonatas on 
                  five CDs, and all five of these are now available once again. 
                  Their return is to be welcomed, since the performances are stylistically 
                  sensitive and the recordings generally natural and clear. 
                
 
                
Mamou plays a modern instrument rather than 
                  a fortepiano, but the insert notes tell us precious little about 
                  the circumstances of the recording. The same is true of the 
                  programme note, alas, which describes the background and music 
                  of all three sonatas within three short paragraphs. Moreover 
                  the danger of easy generalisation and enthusiastic over-statement 
                  is not avoided: 'In the summer of 1778, Mozart arrived in Paris 
                  with his mother who, sick and abandoned by her son, died on 
                  July 3rd. This is doubtless the explanation for all the dramatic 
                  force of the first of these 'Parisian' sonatas, in A minor.' 
                  Surely this is a case of two plus two being made to make five. 
                  There is also a consistent error in the key ascribed to the 
                  famous A major Sonata, K331, which is wrongly labelled as being 
                  in E throughout. 
                
 
                
The Tunisian-born pianist Roberte Mamou is 
                  based in Europe, and has worked mostly in Belgium. She has just 
                  the right manner for this repertoire, always seeming to choose 
                  an appropriate tempo and to phrase with care for the musical 
                  line and the thematic personality. When these things feel as 
                  spontaneous and natural as they do here, the performer can take 
                  due credit. 
                
 
                
The A minor Sonata, K310, is a masterpiece 
                  typical of Mozart's ability to make a penetrating musical statement 
                  with minimum strain. Mamou, as usual, gets the tempo just right 
                  in the first movement (TRACK 1, 0.00), allowing the obsessive 
                  rhythmic cell to make its nagging point. I am less convinced 
                  by the succeeding Andante cantabile, however, in which her phrasing 
                  takes little account of Mozart's 'con espressione' marking (TRACK 
                  2, 1.30), with somewhat prosaic results. 
                
 
                
The performances of the other two sonatas, 
                  K330 and K331, are more completely successful, developing a 
                  pleasing balance of lyricism and rhythmic activity all to good 
                  stylistic effect. The opening Allegro moderato of the C major 
                  Sonata (TRACK 4, 0.00) is a fine example of her special understanding 
                  of this repertoire. She also shapes the bold opening movement 
                  variations of K331 in such a way that they feel like a whole 
                  unit rather than a succession of miniatures. Moreover her relatively 
                  slow tempo for the central minuet makes a nice balance between 
                  this and the final 'Turkish' rondo, which is delightfully pointed 
                  in its phrasing. 
                
                  Terry Barfoot  
                
See also volumes one 
                  and four