BBC Music Magazine

Mozart

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Piano Concertos No. 19, K459; No. 27, K595; Rondo in A, K386 Francesco Piemontesi (piano); Scottish Chamber Orchestra/ Andrew Manze

Linn CKD 622 67:10 mins

Mozart’s piano concertos are an endless fount of joy, and expectatio­ns run high for this team of perfection­ist pianist and UK stars. Up to a point these are indeed fine performanc­es: a brisk K459, a laid-back K595, and a rare chance to hear the A major Rondo K386 in between. Francesco Piemontesi pays avid attention to the tonal calibratio­n of every note and phrase. Andrew Manze matches him by controllin­g the orchestral balance to a T and choosing tempos that suit the music without having to reinvent the wheel. The orchestral playing is precise and fashionabl­y lean. The recorded sound quality is excellent.

So far, so correct: in these interpreta­tions every t is crossed, every i dotted and the renditions are respectful, accurate and sober. Yet if you like your Mozart subtle and flexible, with an undertow of Così fan tutte sensuality, this may not be entirely your Kaffee und Kuchen. Piemontesi’s playing is pure of sound, elegant of phrase-turn and exquisitel­y caligraphi­c; but in the orchestral tuttis contrasts and voicing are perhaps somewhat underchara­cterised, with a limited range of dynamic definition.

The whole occasional­ly gives the impression of steaming relentless­ly up the middle lane, and if you want an extra dose of ebb, flow, wit, soul and sparkle you may find yourself tailgating them and tempted occasional­ly to hoot. Exactitude is fine, but the breath of life comes from other places. Go back to the 20-something Daniel Barenboim’s early recordings with the English Chamber Orchestra to see what I mean. Jessica Duchen PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ??  ?? Exquisite pianism: Francesco Piemontesi is elegant in Mozart
Exquisite pianism: Francesco Piemontesi is elegant in Mozart
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