Johannes Brahms
Handel Variations opus 24
Two Rhapsodies opus 79
Six Piano Pieces opus 118
Four Piano Pieces opus 119
Murray Perahia, Piano
Review By Phil Gold
The major
work on this Brahms recital is the Variations
and Fugue on a Theme of Handel. It enters a crowded field. I reviewed
Shai Wosner's performance earlier in these pages [Onyx 4055]. While
Wosner is right at home on Scheonberg's Suite opus 25, I could not muster much
enthusiasm for his Brahms, concluding "I suspect he plays the Brahms the way he
does to highlight the similarities between the two composers, discarding some of
the poetry and flow to make his point."
My colleague Max Westler was not much more
forthcoming in his assessment of
Olga Kern's version, recommending instead Leon Fleisher's 1956
performance which has just been reissued at bargain price in the wonderful set Leon
Fleisher Plays Beethoven and Brahms [Sony Classical 88691918052]. You
won't be turning to this version for its recorded sound, which is rather
unflattering and with a fair amount of tape hiss, but Max is right on the money.
You will find a directness and passion that truly convinces the listener,
although if I had to criticize the performance itself, it would be for the
relative stability of the volume level throughout.
Also at bargain price, Naxos features IdilBiret
in a well recorded studio performance from 1989, along with the early Variations
on a Theme by Schumann and the Variations
on a Theme by Paganini Opus 35 [Naxos 8.550350]. This is another
dramatic reading with an excellent feeling for Brahms' sonorities. It bears many
similarities in approach and timing to the Fleisher recording, but the recording
shows 33 years' worth of improvement.
So am I buying what Perahia is selling? For the Handel
Variations, an unequivocal yes! Perahia's piano is superbly captured
here, with a clarity and level of inner detail that quite escape the Naxos
recording. On sound quality alone, this version is a superb example of the art
of recording a concert piano. And that fidelity serves this music very well,
with its wide range of dynamics and color. There is also freshness and a
quicksilver nature to the playing that puts me in mind of Martha Argerich. Also
remarkable is the attention to detail throughout. There are no finger faults
here, but the virtuosity goes much further than that to a wonderful precision of
exact note length, clean striking and fullness of tone that his close
association in recent years with the music of Bach may well have enhanced.
Taking the mechanical and mathematical skills that are required for a great set
of the Goldberg Variations into
the romantic world of Brahms is an excellent idea, and especially so when the
Brahms in question is infused by that other baroque master, Handel. There are
details in this performance that you cannot discern in Biret or Fleisher, due I
suspect both to Sony's excellent engineering and to Perahia's meticulous
attention to detail and fine sense of balance between the left and right hands.
But in the later works on this disc, Perahia does
not fully convince. The color of his playing lacks a certain richness while the
piano tone is cooler and less dynamic. When I turn to the 9CD box Arthur
Rubinstein Plays Brahms [RCA Red Seal 886977609923] there is a
natural flow that escapes Perahia. This was Rubinstein at his very best. He had
a special affinity with Brahms that only Gilels and Katchen approached. Some of
the recordings are from 1959 with a sound that cannot compare to today's best,
but other pieces date from 1970 and carry their years very well indeed. The
whole box is very special, with the highlight being the Piano Quartets recorded with members of the Guarneri String
Quartet.
So if you're looking for a superb performance of
the Handel Variations, this is a
splendid disc, but for the late Brahms solo piano repertoire, this disc is
missing the magic.
Performance: 5 (Op
24) 3.5 (Op 79, Op 118, Op 119)
Sound Quality: 5 (Op 24) 4.5
(Op 79, Op 118, Op 119)
Enjoyment: 5 (Op
24) 3.5 (Op 79, Op 118, Op 119)