Arriving at the penultimate recital in András Schiff’s chronological 
                  recordings of the complete solo piano sonatas of Ludwig van 
                  Beethoven, and the chances are you will have already ‘had a 
                  go’ with one or other of the previous 
                  volumes, or at least have considered whether or not you 
                  are currently interested in exploring this particular series 
                  based on reviews or the contents of your no doubt already overstocked 
                  shelves.
                  Finding myself 
                    more than usually daunted by the idea of reviewing these particular 
                    recordings of the later Beethoven sonatas, I first had to 
                    ask myself ‘why?’ My initial reason has to be that, being 
                    likely to come out with some rapturously positive descriptions 
                    and statements on the subject, my basis for such conclusions 
                    were always going to be founded on a good deal less comparative 
                    experience than many of my fine colleagues, and quite possibly 
                    many of you good readers. Not having lived and breathed dozens 
                    of illustrious recordings – I’ve ‘had’ no more than three 
                    complete sets and can only add a few supplementary live performances, 
                    I more or less decided to ditch my usual references and work 
                    with the original text. Equipped with a bulky urtext edition 
                    of the Klaviersonaten, Band II, I’ve been having a 
                    go at unravelling some of the magic which I feel András Schiff 
                    creates with these pieces.
                  The first thing 
                    to mention is that these are very much ‘live’ performances. 
                    This is not to say that there is anything much in the way 
                    of audience noise, and Schiff’s accuracy as a performer is 
                    pretty much legendary and fully validated in these recordings. 
                    My point is that, projecting into a real auditorium, the touch 
                    can appear, or just is different to someone who is 
                    performing in a studio to a set of microphones at close level. 
                    Some phrases and passages can come across as more heavily 
                    articulated, some of the upper ranges pushed harder than you 
                    might expect or be used to. The sense of contrast and drama 
                    is often heightened in this way, with breathless, almost silent 
                    passages making the listener focus and tune their hearing 
                    as if adjusting to the ethereal strum of a clavichord, and 
                    then being blown away by the full force of a modern concert 
                    grand. This we all experience from close too, our ears finding 
                    themselves positioned as microphones, rather than at the safer 
                    distance of the auditorium. For me, it is this very sense 
                    of confrontation with this ‘reality’ of a performance which 
                    makes these recordings extra special. I’ve often worked as 
                    a page turner, and know what power a great pianist can generate 
                    with a concert grand from close quarters – even when my attention 
                    is more fixed on standing at the right moment, not turning 
                    two pages at once, and whether my tie is preventing the player 
                    from reading a vital F#. Mr. Schiff does not need a page turner 
                    in this repertoire, I hasten to add.
                  Almost from the 
                    start of the remarkable Sonata No.27 op.90, Schiff 
                    lays his expressive fingerprint on the score. The essential 
                    compactness and reserved drama of those opening chords promise 
                    a great deal of high-grade content, but my ear was first drawn 
                    to the almost Eroll Garner-like lateness of the right hand 
                    in that limpid second section in the theme. This is a characteristic 
                    of Schiff’s playing in these melodic sections, and almost, 
                    almost extends to micro-spreading of the functionally 
                    melodic chords in the right hand of the first movement of 
                    Op.101. Like well considered vibrato his application of such 
                    techniques is however judicious, and my pointing this out 
                    is in no way to been seen as a negative comment.
                  Schiff is alive 
                    to the fact that many of the most striking moments in this 
                    music are to be found in the quietest passages. The transition 
                    which starts at 2:44 in the first movement of Op.90 and runs 
                    on until 3:00 has a Ligeti like feel; exploring three or four 
                    notes in an extraordinarily modern way. These explorations 
                    of sonority and texture with a minimum of means is something 
                    to which Schiff seems particularly attuned, and there are 
                    dozens of similar moments which he gives the kind of improvisatory 
                    quality which you might in isolation associate more with someone 
                    like Keith Jarrett. Again, this is not to imply a break with 
                    idiom or any kind of bizarre eccentricity which may immediately 
                    impress and subsequently grate on the ear. These are all part 
                    of the exquisite symbiosis which Schiff seems to generate 
                    between himself and a composer no longer with us, but not 
                    so very long dead for all that.
                  The luminous lyricism 
                    of Op.90 is impregnated with generosity of warmth and expression 
                    here, but Schiff never over-indulges us with artificial rubato 
                    or heart-on-sleeve romanticism. These are pieces whose toes 
                    still balance on the shoulders of Haydn and other giants, 
                    and Schiff performs that tricky balancing act of giving us 
                    the revolutionary and the romantic spirit of Beethoven without 
                    tarring the music with sticky sentimentality. The opening 
                    of the Sonata No.28 Op.101 appears almost as an extension 
                    of Op.90, the song-like shapes of its opening theme a surprising 
                    continuity two years on from its predecessor. More radical 
                    is the second movement, whose rugged rhythmic interruptions 
                    all too often result in a lumpy, non- Marschmässig forward 
                    impetus. Schiff gives us maximum contrast, finding a rare 
                    beauty in the sustained pedal marking of the quiet central 
                    moment in bars 30-34, but playing Beethoven’s gruff musical 
                    arguments as written, which is powerfully peculiar enough. 
                    The una corda instruction for the opening of the third 
                    movement is like the effect of muted strings. I have known 
                    players who refuse to follow this instruction, feeling the 
                    sound too muffled, but Beethoven knew what he was about, and 
                    he and Schiff introduce us to a mysterious and enigmatic world 
                    from which the reprise of the opening theme can emerge like 
                    a ghostly reminder of a lost love. The joyous 2/4 Presto 
                    of the finale, with all its dancing counterpoint, comes 
                    as more of a surprise on the strength of the transition which 
                    precedes it, but the often dark sonorities which in which 
                    Beethoven keeps the registers of the piano prevents much in 
                    the way of witty sparkle. The deep dissonances in the left 
                    hand at 4:51 come less as a shock and more as a logical progression, 
                    but Schiff holds nothing back, weighing in with full impact 
                    – the fright of such fury softened by the gentle dynamics 
                    of most of the final pages.
                  So, to the Hammerklavier, 
                    which rightly holds a position as the highlight; or focus 
                    of most difficulties in any complete set of Beethoven’s Sonatas. 
                    Schiff observes the newfangled metronome markings given by 
                    Beethoven, which in their own right provide enough impetus 
                    to prevent needless wallowing in the huge structures of the 
                    piece. Schiff provides plenty of clues and pointers in his 
                    booklet comments, as usual for this series presented in the 
                    form of an interview with Martin Meyer. He notes intervallic 
                    relationships, both the forward and backward-looking aspects 
                    of the music – as far back as Bach with the fugues, as well 
                    as a reference to something like a ‘czardas’ in the 2/4 Presto 
                    which follows the 3/4 main theme and first development 
                    section of the Scherzo second movement, as well as 
                    forward to the final Sonata Op.111.
                  This piece is 
                    mind-mangling enough to follow as a listener let alone to 
                    learn from memory as a player, and I’ve always found it a 
                    hard nut to crack. I’d love to be able to tell you how he 
                    does it, but András Schiff somehow manages to crack the nut 
                    for me at every level. I think part of the answer is, as with 
                    the other sonatas, the approach to sonority. Many pianists 
                    see the vast architecture of the music as paramount, and the 
                    attempt to express this in the nature of a symphony can result 
                    in the creation of an impenetrable monument which one can 
                    only admire at a distance. Schiff opens the doors of the music, 
                    reaching out by placing true emphasis on the expressive and 
                    the beautiful as well as the enigmatic, and the overt and 
                    sometimes harshly dramatic elements. Schiff himself doesn’t 
                    make this as an observation, but to my ears the music is presented 
                    here more in the way of an opera rather than a symphony. There 
                    is a great deal of complicated narration and the memory is 
                    always going to be challenged to make sense of vast tracts 
                    of ‘difficult’ music in the Hammerklavier. Schiff’s 
                    characterisation of certain aspects of the piece provide extra 
                    points of reference however. If you can hear the ‘voices’ 
                    of each character returning and growing, or can visualise 
                    gestures and scenarios in the drama, then the seeds of appreciation 
                    of this incredible piece may well be planted or enhanced. 
                    There is of course a great deal of abstraction in the music, 
                    but Schiff knows where to find wit and points of contact where 
                    Beethoven relaxes for a moment. We can gasp at his technical 
                    prowess in those ‘unplayable’ trills in the finale, but Schiff 
                    doesn’t make the music sound easy in any superficial way. 
                    His observation of sforzando accents and dynamics bring 
                    out every conceivable aspect of Beethoven’s almost deranged 
                    imagination. This is a performance which is simultaneously 
                    exhausting and exhilarating, which is the way it should be.
                  Just to ensure 
                    that I wasn’t running away with my own imagination, I had 
                    a re-listen to the young Daniel Barenboim’s 1970 EMI recording. 
                    This too is a remarkable achievement, but I don’t hear the 
                    same clarity of voicing in that final fugue. Schiff might 
                    be accused of over-emphasising some markings, but often with 
                    so much else going on at the same that over-emphasis is the 
                    equivalent of effective stage direction: the action and message 
                    otherwise running the risk of becoming lost. Elsewhere in 
                    the work I prefer Schiff’s pedalling and articulation in the 
                    more full-frontal passages, characterised in that opening 
                    fanfare which Barenboim spouts like a grand erupting fountain, 
                    where Schiff’s opening is very much more the rise of the curtain 
                    on a very big stage. I find the connectedness of Schiff’s 
                    drama with the surrounding passages more convincing as well. 
                    Barenboim is slower than the metronome mark in the first movement, 
                    and gives the impression more of stopping and starting rather 
                    than flowing in a single tempo with subtle rubati.
                  With ECM’s superlative 
                    piano recording, this has to become a top recommendation for 
                    these pieces whatever the competition. Beethoven’s late piano 
                    sonatas present their own magic and problems, and in setting 
                    the relatively benign Op.90 and lyrically appealing Op.101 
                    sonatas against what Schiff agrees is “probably the hardest 
                    work in the whole repertoire of the piano”, both player and 
                    record label have a winning programme which can stand on its 
                    own, beyond the context of the entire set. The combination 
                    of absolute technical mastery and the spirit of improvisational 
                    exploration make these performances pulsate with vibrancy 
                    both latent and instant. If your tastes are anything like 
                    mine, your spirit will remain restless until you do have 
                    the entire set however – especially after hearing this.
                  Dominy Clements