The Fauré sonatas 
                are seldom coupled together but when 
                they are it’s usually by chamber musicians 
                and ones moreover of taste and understanding. 
                Critics have generally so relied on 
                the Early=Lyric, Late=Cryptic dichotomy 
                with regard to his chamber works that 
                it takes a brave musician to cry wolf. 
                Since I’ve always been astounded that 
                anyone should think the E minor Sonata 
                "difficult" or – as I read 
                in a book only yesterday – "gnomic" 
                I read Roy Howat’s refreshing notes 
                with fellow feeling. "A youthful 
                intensity redolent of the First Sonata, 
                despite all the distance Fauré 
                had travelled meanwhile" Howat 
                writes, and Amen, Brother to that. He 
                plays it thus, as well, along with his 
                chamber and sonata colleague, the German 
                violinist Alban Beikircher. 
              
 
              
The Second Sonata seems 
                to me the better performance. The Op.13 
                is attractive but the first movement 
                is a little slow and one’s ear is drawn 
                more to Howat than to Beikircher, whose 
                elegant reticence is not always to the 
                work’s advantage. He tends to stress 
                the dolce aspects of the Sonata and 
                to underplay the assertive independence 
                of the violin’s line. I also felt the 
                Scherzo might have been just that bit 
                tighter – it’s very tender and withdrawn 
                in the central panel but not quite terpsichorean 
                in the outer parts. There’s certainly 
                no lack of youthfulness in the Second 
                Sonata, as I said, with adroit pianism 
                to the fore and an Andante crafted and 
                sculpted with decisive lyricism and 
                a finale light, lissom and fine. If 
                you really do think it so impenetrable 
                I suggest you take a listen to Beikircher 
                and Howat and let’s hope they can kick 
                some critical commonplaces into touch. 
              
 
              
There are some charming 
                morceaux to complete the disc, a couple 
                in arrangements by Howat. The Andante 
                is the most sheerly interesting from 
                a musico-historical perspective because 
                it’s derived from the middle movement 
                of the discarded Violin Concerto. The 
                Morceau de lecture was written for the 
                Paris Conservatoire’s sight-reading 
                test. Howat has arranged the Sicilienne 
                and its strong accents and delightful 
                lilt suits this version well (the dedicatee 
                of the Cello and Piano version, the 
                English cellist W H Squire, recorded 
                it and some enterprising company should 
                reissue that Columbia for a taste of 
                authentic Fauré). The Air de 
                dance from Caligula is also here in 
                Howat’s arrangement and makes a pleasing 
                end piece. Good sound and notes with 
                which I agree. 
              
 
              
Jonathan Woolf