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Ludwig Van BEETHOVEN (1770 –1827)
The Complete Piano Concertos
CD 1
Piano Concerto No 1 in C major, Op. 15 (1795) [38:18]
Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major, Op. 19 (1793-98) [29:25]
CD 2
Piano Concerto No 3 in C minor, Op. 37 (1800) [36:04]
Piano Concerto No 4 in G major, Op. 58 (1806) [33:23]
CD 3
Piano Concerto No 5 in E flat major, Op. 15 ‘Emperor’ (1809) [38:50]
Paul Lewis (piano)
BBC Symphony Orchestra/Jirí Belohlávek
rec. July, November 2009, March 2010, BBC Maida Vale Studios, London
and November 2009, Air Studios, London. DDD
HARMONIA MUNDI HMC 902053.55 [3 CDs: 67:48 + 69:31 + 38:53]
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Paul Lewis (b.1972) has already acquired a substantial reputation,
not least through his survey of all thirty-two piano sonatas
by Beethoven, which he performed in recitals all round the world
between 2005 and 2007. His studio recordings of the sonatas
- issued, like this present set, by Harmonia Mundi – have attracted
widespread acclaim. I was lucky enough to hear him give Beethoven
sonata recitals at the Cheltenham Music Festivals of 2006 (review)
and 2007 (review)
and on both those occasions I was deeply impressed by his performances.
Subsequently, I acquired his full set of the sonatas on CD,
which more than confirmed the favourable impression of those
concerts. So with his Beethovenian credentials firmly established
as far as I was concerned, the prospect of hearing Paul Lewis
in recordings of all five Beethoven concertos was extremely
enticing.
Linked, no doubt, to the release of the CDs, Lewis is playing
all five concertos at the 2010 Henry Wood Promenade Concerts
– the first pianist to perform all five in the same Proms season
- though only in numbers One and Four has he been accompanied
by his partners on these CDs, the BBC Symphony Orchestra and
Jirí Belohlávek (review).
In the Second concerto he was partnered by the City of Birmingham
Symphony Orchestra and Andris Nelsons (review).
At the time of writing this review performances of the Third
concerto and the ‘Emperor’ were still to take place.
In appraising these performances I’d like to start with the
Second concerto because, although this work was published
after Concerto No 1, it was the first to be written. This is
the most lightly scored of the five concertos, requiring one
flute, pairs of oboes, bassoons and horns plus the usual strings.
In spirit as well as scoring it seems most fully to inhabit
the eighteenth century. Jirí Belohlávek seems fully in tune
with this and he gets the opening Allegro con brio off
to a bracing start, the dotted rhythms well sprung. Lewis treats
us to some playful pianism in this movement and he receives
lively support throughout from the orchestra. Although it’s
not stated in the documentation, all the cadenzas played by
Paul Lewis in these performances are Beethoven’s own. The one
that he provided for the Second concerto was written out, I
believe, some years after the first performances of the work;
Lewis delivers it very well indeed.
His account of the slow movement is beautifully articulated.
The tempo marking is adagio, which is how Lewis and Belohlávek
take it yet the music is kept pleasingly fluid and forward-moving.
Beethoven’s pupil, Carl Czerny, likened this movement to a dramatic
vocal scena. I’m not quite sure I see that: there seems to me
to be too much decoration in the solo part, which gives an improvisatory
feel to the proceedings. Lewis seems to treat the movement more
as a pensive nocturne and he brings it off very well indeed.
The finale is an infectious, gay rondo. Very rightly both conductor
and soloist use the sforzandi and accents, in which the
movement abounds, as springboards through which they impel the
music forward. Lewis’s playing is sprightly, witty and light
on its feet and the BBC Symphony Orchestra match him in every
respect. The movement really dances along and I enjoyed it very
much.
Moving backwards numerically but forwards in time we come to
the First concerto. Beethoven conceived this work on
a grander scale. Not only is it a significantly longer piece
but the scoring is richer and more extrovert for Beethoven added
a pair of clarinets to the orchestra required for the Second
concerto and, crucially, he also introduces timpani and a pair
of trumpets, thus following the precedent set by Mozart in several
of his grander late piano concertos. Belohlávek shapes the opening
orchestral passage splendidly, obtaining spruce and elegant
playing from the BBCSO. When Lewis joins in his playing offers
grace and energy in equal measure. For much of the time the
performance is light and genial but there’s a touch of steel
at certain points, which I welcome. My listening notes identify
several places where Lewis’s touch or imagination – or both
– are especially pleasing. One stands out particularly. At 9:03
the soloist has a short, descending flourish before the opening
theme returns on full orchestra. I’ve heard some pianists play
the passage in semi-quavers, as written. Others treat it as
more of a glissando – Lewis’s one-time teacher, Alfred
Brendel, does this in his Philips recording with Simon Rattle.
Lewis also takes it as a glissando but, dare I say it,
he brings it off much more thrillingly than Brendel. He makes
it into a glissando down almost the entire length of
the piano. Not only does he make this an exciting moment but
also it’s rhetorically and stylistically important, I think.
Such a gesture underlines the journey that Beethoven would undertake
in the course of these five concertos from the eighteenth-century,
Mozartian world to that of the nineteenth-century Romantic concerto.
Like many other pianists, Lewis plays the longest and most discursive
of the three cadenzas, one of them incomplete, that Beethoven
wrote out for the first movement of this concerto. I do have
a slight reservation about this since the cadenza plays for
about five minutes (from 12:13 – 17:17 here), which is a substantial
span in a movement lasting about 18 minutes in total: does this
unbalance the movement? On the other hand, this cadenza allows
for a very full discussion of the movement’s musical material
and when it’s played as excellently as is the case here then
doubts are effectively silenced.
The slow movement is marked Largo and the broad pace
adopted here is not only completely convincing but also permits
a very expressive account of the music. The BBC woodwind principals
impress hereabouts, especially the first clarinet player, whose
final, melting little solo (10:38) is a particular delight.
The voicing of the first of the three wind chords at the very
end isn’t completely unanimous and though this is an extremely
minor blemish one notices it simply because all the preceding
playing has been so distinguished. The vivacious account of
the impish rondo finale is a delight from first bar to last.
This is music that should fairly bubble and that’s just what
happens here in a performance that combines wit and dexterity
on the part of both Paul Lewis and the orchestral players. It
sets the seal on a winning reading of the concerto.
The scoring of the Third concerto is identical to that
of the First, save that Beethoven adds a second flute. However,
the conception is grander and it’s surely no coincidence that
Beethoven composed this concerto in a minor key, a sure sign
of Great Intent on his part. From the outset the orchestral
writing has an increased strength and vigour, well realised
by Belohlávek and his players, and when the soloist begins he
has more of a grand entrance than was the case in either of
the earlier concertos. Lewis and the orchestra shape the dialogue
between them very well in a performance that is admirably taut
but which also has the right amount of spaciousness. The dramatic
passages impress very much – Lewis is a fine exponent of Beethoven’s
pianistic rhetoric – but the delicate passages, of which there
are many, are just as successful. Lewis tops off his reading
with a fine account of the cadenza.
The slow movement, in warm E major, strikes me as Beethoven’s
deepest concerto movement to date. There’s also a new sensuousness
to the music. Lewis’s playing has a touch of magic about him
and, in support, Belohlávek obtains a response from his orchestra
that is consistently excellent and eloquent. As an example of
the high quality of the performance I’d single out the lovely
touch of inwardness in the passage beginning at 5:02. A little
later on, at 7:08, Lewis places the “wrong note” ascending scales
beautifully. A few moments later, in the short cadenza, Beethoven
writes the injunction sempre con gran espressione. To
be honest, on this occasion that instruction is superfluous
both at this point and elsewhere: that’s what we’ve been hearing
throughout the course of the movement. Lewis eases into the
main subject of the rondo finale delightfully – one of many
occasions throughout this set where he uses rubato felicitously.
The reading of this movement is full of wit and good humour
and there are many little touches that will bring a smile to
the listener’s face. The whole movement sparkles, not least
in the concluding presto (from 8:14), which is engagingly vivacious.
The Fourth concerto is my personal favourite;
I love its mix of lyricism and philosophy. The simple, unaffected
eloquence of Lewis’s opening solo promises much, as does the
subsequent orchestral tutti, which is skilfully shaped by Belohlávek.
As we’ve experienced in the previous concertos, Lewis’s interplay
with the orchestra is very well done. He’s unafraid to use rubato
or briefly to slow the pace to make an expressive point. On
every occasion that he does so – and this is true in the other
works also – the effect is not exaggerated and is tastefully
done. At one point in my listening notes I wrote “grace, elegance
& lyricism” and, on reflection, that will serve as a good
summary of Paul Lewis’s pianism throughout this movement. He
uses Beethoven’s first cadenza, the one which is most commonly
heard.
For the slow movement Beethoven makes the soloist change from
philosopher to poet. Lewis isn’t perhaps as hushed of tone as
some pianists I’ve heard but this is of a piece with his unaffected,
natural approach to the work as a whole and I find it completely
convincing. The forthright rondo is full of high spirits and
I thoroughly enjoyed the good humoured way in which Lewis and
Belohlávek put it across, culminating in an exhilarating account
of the presto coda.
And so to the ‘Emperor’. The opening piano flourishes
are commanding, as they should be, after which we plunge into
the new world of the Romantic piano concerto with Belohlávek
investing the orchestral introduction with a fine impetus. The
performance that unfolds is a virile one but, at the same time,
it’s far from lacking in sensitivity on the part of either the
soloist or the orchestra. Indeed, it can be best summed up as
an excellent and well judged combination of grandeur and lyricism.
The slow movement is very fine indeed. The mood is beautifully
set by Belohlávek and his players, who give a most refined account
of the orchestral introduction – I’d describe the playing as
silky. For all the excellence of his pianism elsewhere in the
set Paul Lewis seems to reserve some of his most poetic playing
for the ruminative pages that comprise this movement. The whole
piece is quite magical, not least the wonderful transition into
the finale. This final movement bounds along with great vigour.
Although the marking con brio is absent from the printed
page that’s very much the spirit of this performance. The music
making has the same gusto that one should experience in a successful
reading of the first movement of the Seventh symphony. This
sets the seal on a very fine and satisfying account of this
magnificent concerto.
This set of the Beethoven piano concertos is a very considerable
achievement. Throughout the set Paul Lewis offers playing of
the very highest level of accomplishment and he evidences great
understanding of Beethoven’s idiom and style – all this one
would expect from an artist who has already given us such a
notable sonata cycle. His performances of all five concertos
are highly enjoyable and very satisfying. Not once in some three
hours of music making did I hear anything that I disliked or
that jarred. What I did experience was a great deal of
intelligent, stylish and very musical playing and I found this
set of performances to be enjoyable and stimulating from start
to finish.
Jirí Belohlávek and the BBC Symphony Orchestra provide adept
support throughout. For whatever reason it seemed that the orchestra
lost its way to some extent during the time that Leonard Slatkin
was at its helm. From performances that I’ve heard and some
of the reviews that I’ve read it appears that the partnership
with Belohlávek is a fruitful one and that he’s developed a
good rapport with the players, which is producing good and consistent
results. On the evidence of their contribution to this set the
partnership is working well and Belohlávek proves himself to
be a sympathetic and very able accompanist. It was evident,
following in the scores, that the players are attentive to dynamics
and other important matters of detail.
The recorded sound is good. The soloist is placed quite forwardly
but not excessively so and the engineers have captured the sound
of the piano very well. The sound of the orchestra is faithfully
reported and generally the balance with the soloist is good.
Just occasionally I thought that some quiet orchestral details
were masked by the piano but this is a very minor matter. The
booklet contains a useful essay by Jean-Paul Montagnier, though
the English translation has some careless slips that should
have been picked up with more careful proof reading.
It’s interesting to note in passing that at the time he recorded
these performances Paul Lewis was about one year older than
was Beethoven himself at the time he completed the Fourth concerto.
I have no doubt that he will continue to deepen and refine his
interpretations of these great works over time and if he gets
the chance to record them again in twenty years time I hope
I’ll be around to hear the results. But if that doesn’t happen
it doesn’t matter because these splendid, stylish performances
offer enough to keep me very happy for years to come. Paul Lewis
is a very considerable Beethoven interpreter and the appearance
of this set is a cause for great rejoicing.
John Quinn
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