Comparison Recordings: 
                Derek Han, Paul Freeman, Philh. O. Brilliant 
                Classics 92112
                Mitsuko Uchida, Jeffrey Tate, English 
                CO [#26] 
                Christian Zacharias, Günter Wand, 
                Northwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra 
                [#27] 
              
Elsewhere I have praised 
                Zacharias’s playing of the Mozart concerti 
                and piano quartets very highly. I was 
                referred to him by friends who are Mozart 
                scholars and who were literally knocked 
                out of their chairs by his performance 
                of #20. Zacharias plays Mozart the way 
                a flower blooms, so naturally and authentically. 
                Zacharias has performed with, and without, 
                a conductor and it seems to make no 
                difference to his interpretation. Barenboim, 
                who is one of the great musical performers 
                of this or any age is more consciously 
                a showman. He performs Mozart, Beethoven, 
                Wagner, Brahms, etc., with consistent 
                brilliance and skill. 
              
 
              
This superlative recording 
                of the last two concerti is remarkable 
                for its perfect balance of sound and 
                style; By comparison, Han/Freeman play 
                with a little less assurance, but with 
                more youthful enthusiasm. Han/Freeman’s 
                orchestral perspective has the piano 
                closer which also adds a sense of immediacy, 
                making the Barenboim with its very realistic 
                concert hall acoustic sound by comparison 
                more remote, more formal. 
              
 
              
Uchida plays these 
                concerti on a giant modern Steinway 
                piano perhaps as Beethoven would play 
                them, perhaps as Liszt played them*. 
                Every resource of her huge instrument 
                is brought to the service of the music, 
                and the result is something that would 
                probably startle if not bewilder Mozart 
                himself. Certainly many people will 
                prefer her approach to any other. 
              
 
              
Mozart left full cadenzas 
                for the first and third movements of 
                K.595 only, and Barenboim uses these. 
                His cadenzas for the other concerto 
                movements are interesting if a little 
                blatant in their quotations from The 
                Marriage of Figaro. 
              
 
              
The movie Amadeus 
                contained many errors, some of them 
                deliberate, but it did get one thing 
                right: there were people who didn’t 
                like Mozart, and for good and sufficient 
                reason. People like that alive today 
                may, for the same reasons, not like 
                Zacharias’s performances. There is something 
                of Mozart the brat in them. Barenboim 
                and Han are placed stylistically between 
                these two extremes and, of the two, 
                Barenboim is slightly the more skilled 
                showman, and for most people his performances 
                will be the most satisfactory. 
              
 
              
*It is difficult for 
                us today to realise that in his time 
                Liszt was considered the finest interpreter 
                of Mozart in the world. Liszt had bought 
                Mozart’s piano to practice on and was 
                so obviously the choice for the 1856 
                memorial concerts in Vienna that the 
                few who disagreed, i.e., Clara Schumann, 
                could be dismissed as cranks. 
              
Paul Shoemaker