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Companion to her disc
of Eighteen Sonatas, also reviewed,
we find here the same virtues that made
that recital so attractive. Joyce Hatto
never sounds etiolated or finicky, her
touch is of appropriate weight and depth
and rhythm is engaged. So in the E flat
major she brings out all the harmonic
quirks with vivid musicianship but no
point making excesses; one could point
to Marcelle Meyer’s playing here, as
I did in my review of the other recital,
and note that this is an unusual occasion
where she is slower and more explicitly
romantic than Hatto. Meyer though tends
to make more of dynamics and to rely
on speed to perky, harpsichord-like
effect, as in the D major K96. The question
of harpsichord, piano or a mixed approach
that uses a piano but in the light of
experience of the harpsichord is one
that continues to dog Scarlatti playing.
But there is room in the pantheon for
Horowitz and Hess as much as for Ross
and Jando.
A few more considerations.
Hatto is more linear and strictly pianistic
in the B minor K87 and she sounds fluency
itself. In the G major K427 one finds
strong divergences. Hatto brings out
the martial pomposity well, with fine
chording, deep but yet still playful,
the left hand’s animating rhythm pushing
things onwards. Her playing is also
colourful and imaginative though turn
to the phenomenally fleet and fluent
Meyer and listen to her convulsive dynamism.
In the D major K492 where Hatto brings
smooth contours Meyer brings vivacity
and a sense of, for want of a more appropriate
word, swing. I greatly enjoyed Hatto’s
way with the A major K39 where she’s
not quite as capricious as Horowitz’s
famous recording or quite as fast but
is still powerfully vigorous.
I’m not sure how much
more Scarlatti there is to come from
Joyce Hatto – if any – but the two I’ve
reviewed have shown her to be a persuasive
and sensitive advocate; qualities that
are entirely and predictably consonant
with her playing as a whole.
Jonathan Woolf
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