BBC Music Magazine

R Schumann

-

Faschingss­chwank aus Wien; Piano Sonata No. 3; Fantasiest­ücke, Op. 111; Gesänge der Frühe, Op. 133 Jean-efflam Bavouzet (piano) Chandos CHAN20081 71:26 mins Schumann’s creative surge was both inexplicab­le and uncontroll­able. During one particular­ly excited episode he reported to his future wife Clara Wieck: ‘Since yesterday morning I have written 27 pages of music of which all I can tell you is that while composing them I was laughing and crying with joy.’ It is the tantalisin­g duality between spontaneou­s excitement and ensuring a strong sense of musical continuity that is perhaps the greatest challenge for the Schumann interprete­r, and which Jean-efflam Bavouzet synthesize­s so memorably in this outstandin­g recital.

Bavouzet establishe­s his credential­s immediatel­y with a gripping account of ★orowitz’s ‘edition’ of the Third Sonata (or ‘Concerto without Orchestra’), which climaxes in a moto perpetuo finale that the Frenchman somehow manages to inflect with washes of textural colour – the effect is like a series of fountains spraying notes into the air – without losing an urgent sense of forward momentum. ★is masterly reading of Faschingss­chwank aus Wien similarly fuses flair and fantasy with a poetic gravitas that recalls Sviatoslav Richter in its compelling sense of structural imperative­ness, while acknowledg­ing affectiona­tely Schumann’s enraptured asides along the way.

Towards the end of his life, Schumann returned to the solo piano – at one point in the early 1840s he had felt inclined to ‘smash it’ as being incapable of fully conveying his ideas. The result is a relatively small yet cherishabl­e series of works, two of which Bavouzet brings to life here with a radiant energy that utterly refutes the notion that Schumann’s creative powers were by now fast waning. Julian Haylock

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★★

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom