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SEEN AND HEARD
UK RECITAL REVIEW
Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms:
Murray Perahia (piano). Barbican Hall, , 5.2. 2009 (CC)
My most recent encounter with Murray Perahia before this solo recital was a
concerto appearance at last year’s Proms, where he played the
Mozart 25th with exemplary style. His
renaissance after his hand injury is justly famous, and what a privilege it was
to hear him in front of a full and appreciative London audience. Last year
(almost exactly, February 12th, 2008) – Perahia cancelled a concert
here at the Barbican because of continuing concerns with is hand, so it was good
to see and hear him in fine fettle.
The featured works
came from the core repertoire (core in the general sense, but also the core of
Perahia’s own repertory). He began with Bach, a composer long close to his
heart, and the composer who allegedly brought him solace during his enforced
time out from piano-playing. John Quinn rightly praised Perahia’s disc of
Partitas Nos. 2-4 on this site; the First Partita (B flat, BWV825) was no
less impressive. I am used to Lipatti’s famous account from
Besançon, so Perahia’s opening came as a surprise in its forthright
demeanour. Was Perahia, King of the Subtle, over-projecting?. Certainly intimacy
was not part of his agenda here, as he saw the Praeludium as more of a bold
statement of intent; the beautifully even flow of the Allemande served to
reassure us that all was well, as did the gorgeous staccato touch of the
Corrente. The Gigue, in a sense balancing the Praeludium, was surprisingly
subdued (although one spent a goodly part of the performance amazed at the
evenness of Perahia’ accompanying left hand). This was memorable, if not great,
playing.
Perahia has long been associated with Mozart, of course, and his complete cycle
is the source of great joy (albeit a joy tempered by the feeling that everything
is just that little bit over-rehearsed). Certainly this sonata, The F-major,
K332 of 1783, was given a fabulously polished account. The imitation of woodwind
and horns in the first movement was clear, the overall feeling of that movement
decidedly celebrational. The concentration of the central Andante con moto was
spell-binding, while the finale contained dazzling passagework, almost virtuoso
in places.
Concluding the 65-minute first half was the “Appassionata”. Here, Perahia took
risks. The opening was darkly shaded, setting the tone for a reading that was
decidedly anti-virtuoso, and which therefore took away some of the fuoco
from this movement. A strangely objective slow movement, organ-like to begin
with (again, bolder than expected) and deliberately lacking the magic that
Pollini regularly finds at its close, led to a finale that was carefully moulded
and technically tremendous in terms of clarity. Only the coda could really be
described as exciting, though.
It was the second part of the concert that really re-established Perahia as a
major pianistic force. The Brahms Variations and Fugue on a Theme of Handel,
Op. 24 is a magnificent piece (and should be heard on a more regular basis on
recital programmes). In its 25 variations and imposing fugue, it contains a
whole world of variety, whilst generally keeping to the simple structural nature
of the theme (taken from Handel’s First Keyboard Suite, HWV434). Perahia’s
splendid finger clarity and exemplary articulation for the theme were a joy –
remember Perahia has recorded Handel successfully, as well as Bach. The sudden
explosion into joy at the Più vivo was a masterstroke, as it dragged Handel
right into Brahms’ side of the court. Perahia seemed set to reveal all of the
huge contrasts inherent in this score, from its manifestations of supreme beauty
through a solidly determined Risoluto (Variation 4), a veiled canon (Misterioso,
Variation 6), a grand Largamente (Variation 13) and a fiery sciolto (Variation
14: “sciolto” means free and unrestrained). The grand design of the final fugue
was magnificent, intelligently shaped and beautifully toned. I can pay Perahia
no greater compliment than to say that his was an account that lost little in
comparison with my preferred recorded pianist in this work, Van Cliburn (the
DVD
of Cliburn’s performance in
Moscow in 1972 on VAI 4455
is well worth searching out. There is also a Cliburn RCA Gold Seal sonic-only
version, but that appears to be out of the
UK
catalogue right now – it remains available in the
USA).
Two Schubert encores rounded the evening off, and although merited it would have
been more apt, I believe, to leave the grandeur of the Brahms ringing firmly in
our ears.
Colin Clarke
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