The distinguished cellist Antonio 
                Meneses returns to Avie for this complete 
                set of Beethoven works, having already 
                recorded well-received discs of Bach, 
                Mendelssohn, 
                Schumann 
                and Schubert as soloist and with 
                pianist Gerard Wyss. Now he joins forces 
                with Menahem Pressler, a founding member 
                of the Beaux Arts trio, and a pianist 
                with about as much chamber music experience 
                as anyone on the planet. Meneses has 
                been a member of this trio since 1998, 
                so these players know each others style 
                and strengths very well indeed, and 
                this combination always has to be an 
                odds-on favourite for providing something 
                just a little bit special. 
               
              
Receiving this release 
                was something of a surprise, as it isn’t 
                the kind of thing I normally make a 
                punt for when sifting through lists 
                of review discs. My shelves aren’t exactly 
                groaning with comparison discs, though 
                this is probably since I still have 
                a mint Philips LP box of Rostropovich 
                and Richter playing the Beethoven Sonatas 
                in 1961 - 835 182/83 AY for antique 
                number fans. This fabulous recording 
                is now available as a CD twofer, and 
                is still something of a benchmark in 
                this repertoire. My occasional thirst 
                for this music considered sated by this 
                proud relic of a bygone age, I’ve neglected 
                these works more than somewhat, but 
                find my interest re-invigorated by the 
                noble performances in this set. 
              
 
              
Concise but useful 
                notes by Stephen Pettitt tell us most 
                and more of what any casual listener 
                needs to know about these pieces. The 
                earlier sonatas still possess a Haydnesque 
                grace, despite Beethoven’s reluctance 
                to cling onto convention. The harmonic 
                journeys many of these movements take 
                us on go beyond what would have been 
                expected for this kind of chamber music 
                and the very fact that Beethoven was 
                taking the cello as seriously as a solo 
                instrument as the violin is some kind 
                of break from a heritage which had very 
                little in the way of precedents – Mozart 
                and Haydn both scoring zero as far as 
                cello sonatas go. Both of these Op.5 
                sonatas receive sterling performances 
                over which I have no bones to pick. 
                What I like about the playing is that 
                both musicians, without restricting 
                anything by way of articulation or dynamic 
                contrast, nonetheless place these works 
                correctly as classical or post-classical 
                pieces, refusing to overcook the content 
                of the music simply because the scowling 
                bust of Beethoven is printed on the 
                cover. This is the younger, fresher 
                Beethoven, embarking on a voyage of 
                discovery – certainly with his own individual 
                foibles and handbook on musical fingerprints 
                and personality traits, but also a part 
                and partly a product of the times in 
                which he lived. 
              
 
              
Disc 2 is the treasure 
                house which contains the Sonatas Op. 
                69, and the two Op.102 works. By 1808 
                Beethoven was well into the mature phase 
                which saw his fifth and sixth symphonies, 
                and as one might expect, the Sonata 
                Op.69 has outgrown the influence 
                of Haydn. The expressive melodies and 
                dramatic twists and turns are given 
                every ounce of song-like phrasing, caressing 
                and plunging by turns as is this were 
                the arrangement of a revolutionary opera 
                – aspects emphasised by moments of absolute 
                static repose which can surprise even 
                today. 
              
 
              
The final Cello 
                Sonatas Op.102 were written at a 
                difficult time for Beethoven, and in 
                a period of relative creative austerity, 
                when among other things he was preoccupied 
                with the task of looking after his nephew 
                Karl. The moods and restless nature 
                of the music reflect Beethoven’s problematic 
                times with uncomfortable clarity, and 
                the duo on this recording pull no punches, 
                refusing to sweeten these often bitter 
                pills with soft-focus playing. I had 
                forgotten what a remarkable piece of 
                music Op.102/2 is. The booklet 
                notes describe it as "the composer 
                as self-analyst, the beginnings, one 
                might claim, of that movement which 
                reached its fruition in Mahler and even 
                Schoenberg." There is indeed a 
                sensation of the cat wrestling strenuously 
                inside its bag, if not entirely having 
                been let out. The D minor chorale might 
                see this analogy stretched as far as 
                Shostakovich’s Op.67 Piano Trio, the 
                solemn tread of its minor key possibly 
                standing for even more than the composer’s 
                own personal troubles. The musicians 
                here are sensitive to the glow shining 
                through in the central D major section 
                however – you can’t have shadow without 
                a source of light, after all. The finale 
                is a wild and eccentric foray into the 
                fugal world of the late quartets, and 
                comes across like a wounded but powerful 
                bird convinced it can still fly. I have 
                yet to have anyone convince me of the 
                intrinsic worth of these Beethovenian 
                grosse fuge experiments in extreme 
                counterpoint, but the music does hold 
                a strange, almost morbid fascination. 
              
 
              
The Variations in this 
                set of works are anything but makeweights, 
                but are lighter in character to much 
                of the music in the sonatas. Beethoven 
                did as much to expand the boundaries 
                in the variation form as for the symphony, 
                sonata and concerto, but the cello and 
                piano variations seem more aimed at 
                filling a need for recreational music 
                than in the tumult of creation which 
                is the Diabelli Variations. Both 
                musicians delight in their joy at being 
                freed for a while from all that intensity 
                of expression, and their performances 
                are transparent and filled with light 
                and refreshing subtleties of contrast. 
                Menahem Pressler in particular has a 
                fine time with Beethoven’s piano writing, 
                which often seems to turn the cello 
                into a secondary accompanist, in the 
                Mozart Zauberflöte sets 
                in particular. The conclusion of this 
                programme with WoO46 is a master 
                stroke of programming after the turbulent 
                finale to the Op.102/2 Sonata, 
                and leaves us with a sense of healthy 
                wellbeing. 
              
 
              
Anyone collecting other 
                discs from the Avie label with Antonio 
                Meneses will know what to expect from 
                the recording. The musicians are close, 
                but not uncomfortably so – the listener 
                is however certainly in the hot seat 
                in an audience of one. The gorgeous 
                Potton Hall acoustic lends its aura 
                to the playing, but is relatively unobtrusive 
                as a result of this intimacy. The detail 
                and colour of both instruments is audible 
                to the last drop of refinement, and 
                as a result is a joy from beginning 
                to end. I will of course be hanging 
                on to my Richter/Rostropovich LPs, but 
                having been dragged into the 21st 
                century by this younger generation of 
                musicians I don’t really feel the need 
                to explore very much further. I have 
                to admit to hearing just a little unevenness 
                on occasion in Menahem Pressler’s 83 
                year-old fingers, with some twiddly 
                bits like trills seeming slower by obligation 
                rather than intent. The returns in musicianship 
                however far outweigh any such comments, 
                and any fan of the kind of playing which 
                helped make the Beaux Arts Trio one 
                of the all-time finest teams in classical 
                music will want this disc. So, hands 
                up: who’s not a fan...? 
              
Dominy Clements