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A “Hatto Original”
Johannes BRAHMS (1833-1897)
Piano Concerto no.1 in d minor op.15 [48:46]
Piano Concerto no.2 in B flat major op.83 [50:56]
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel op.24 (orch. Edmund RUBBRA (1901-1986) op.47) [28:39]
Variations on a Theme by Haydn op.56a [16:41]
Vladimir Ashkenazy (piano)
Concertgebouw Orchestra, Amsterdam (PC1), Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra (PC2), Cleveland Orchestra (Handel & Haydn)/Bernard Haitink (PCs), Vladimir Ashkenazy (Handel & Haydn)
rec. Concertgebouw, Amsterdam, May 1983 (PC1) Sofiensaal, Vienna, October 1982 (PC2) Severance Hall, Cleveland, March 1991 (Haydn), July 1992 (Handel)
DECCA 470 519-2 [77:34 + 67:45]



Piano Concerto no.2 was issued in 2002 as the work of Joyce Hatto, with the National Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra conducted by René Köhler, on Concert Artist CACD 8001-2
 
Orchestras are not so easy to disguise. Even with the VPO there are minute imprecisions, a near-blip in the opening horn solo and so on. Half a minute was enough to confirm the Second Concerto as what everybody said it was. Not that I doubted Andrew Rose’s wave-patterns, but there is evidence that not all “Hattos” contain the same performance. Well, my “Hatto” Brahms 2 is the Ashkenazy all right. But I will deal with the Hatto aspect when I get to that work.
 
Haitink begins No. 1 very finely, at a tempo that neither hurries nor drags, and there is real power in his fortes. There’s a suspicion, though, that things slacken a bit during the quieter moments. When Ashkenazy enters he shows a notable ability to stretch the tempo without actually losing it. Haitink follows him metrically, in the sense that they stay together, but when the orchestra comes to the fore in the secondary material the conductor doesn’t stretch the tempo, he slows it down. The result is that Ashkenazy doesn’t have that rock-firm framework in which to operate that George Szell provided for no fewer than four soloists on record. Much of what Ashkenazy does is fine, though his tone as recorded becomes hard above forte in the upper register. There are certainly some exciting climaxes.
 
Haitink begins the Adagio with a fairly flowing tempo. When Ashkenazy enters he takes a different tempo altogether, much slower, and sustained quite magically. Haitink stays with him and draws a backdrop of hushed beauty from the orchestra. But when the opening music reappears in an orchestral interlude, he reverts to his original tempo, obliging Ashkenazy to establish his own tempo again when he re-enters. In a way this divergence of opinions produces the most memorable movement in the two concertos; at least it sounds like a real, spontaneous performance. Perhaps this is why the artists and producer didn’t remake it.
 
The finale follows the pattern of the first movement, the pianist’s attempts at something more vital colliding with the conductor’s more laid-back manner. One feels that either party would have been better stimulated by a different partner. I’m not surprised the Hattifiers went elsewhere for this concerto; not because it’s actually bad – these are musicians of the highest class even if they were not ideal partners – but because the actual foibles of the performance may stick in the mind. Of the two, it was the more likely to be recognized.
 
The Second Concerto is more unitary in manner, though I get the idea Ashkenazy is adapting to Haitink rather than the other way round. There are still occasional moments of hard tone from Ashkenazy, but they are less noticeable here. It’s a nice performance if you like a pretty broad first movement, an energetic but controlled Scherzo, a mellow Andante and a Finale which aims more at grace and good humour than anything climatic. The recording is lively with a touch of glare at times.
 
The Hattified version has filtered the treble and slightly boosted the bass, if hardly enough to give much credence to the claim in the booklet that she studied this work with Wilhelm Backhaus. Ashkenazy’s is a much less rugged sound and so it remains. There has been some jiggery-pokery with the stereo spread. Hattification could hardly extend to reversing the sound-picture of an orchestral recording – cellos on the left and violins on the right would have aroused comment – but sometimes the picture is wider, rather polarized around the speakers, at other times it comes together again. The piano doesn’t always seem to be in the same place, which it certainly does in the Decca original. There is no time shrinking or stretching. Altogether, a clever attempt to make a fine if slightly over-the-top Decca recording sound like an acceptable and creditable effort from a low-budget company.
 
So here is what I said originally:
 
Whether the concerto is on quite the same pedestal [as the op.118 pieces which I praised very highly] will depend rather on your reaction to the first movement. During the orchestral introduction it seems woefully slow; yet when Hatto enters, how full of notes the music is even at this speed. In fact, Hatto’s richly commanding playing lets us hear details that are often brushed over and the tempo sounds perfectly natural when she is playing. The orchestra (a perfectly good one [a notable understatement]) doesn’t quite manage this. Is it because the tempo is wrong or because the conductor, though evidently an able musician [how relieved he’ll be!], is not on Hatto’s same level? She should have recorded it, maybe, with Kurt Sanderling in his late phase.
The remaining movements are more "normal" in their tempi and Hatto’s pianism is always to be enjoyed. However, to bring off a Brahms concerto successfully you do need a partnership of the highest level and my feeling at the end was that the music had run its course well without the pair quite striking sparks off each other. This is a performance I shall return to, but not a first recommendation. However, Joyce Hatto is a pianist who demands to be heard [and who doubtless would have been if she had been as good as Ashkenazy].
 
So much for the claim that MusicWeb automatically gave Hatto rave reviews, and Jonathan Woolf’s review was on similar lines to my own.
 
Does it make a difference if we know it is Ashkenazy playing? Well actually, considering this is the one “Hatto” recording to have emerged so far with a soloist, conductor and orchestra widely described as “great”, I think the Hattifiers were extremely clever. Famous though the artists are, this is not a recording that created great ripples. Even Ashkenazy’s greatest fans probably bought it and forgot to take it off the shelf again, not because it’s bad but because, coming from who it does, we have a right to expect more. This was early days in my Hatto reviewing and if I remember rightly I didn’t even know her “story”. Certainly, the introductory paragraph to my review doesn’t mention it and I am wondering if the sob-tale in all its glory had actually appeared on the Concert Artist website by that time. I took it to be a very creditable affair by a pianist whose name was barely known to me. And so it would have been if it had been.
 
Now don’t think I’m debunking Ashkenazy. Anyone who doesn’t read reviews and picks this set up on the strength of the artists won’t be seriously disappointed. They could do far worse. But they’d do better still with Gilels/Jochum, Gilels/Reiner (no.2), Serkin/Szell and quite a few others.
 
The two items conducted by Ashkenazy a decade later help to make the offer more enticing. This is my first encounter with the Rubbra arrangement though I’ve always known about it. It was made in 1938 and premièred by Boult that same year. It quickly got the honour of a Toscanini performance, but only one because he didn’t like it much, and was recorded by Ormandy in the LP era. It has occasionally been revived since.
 
While Schoenberg’s more celebrated arrangement of the Piano Quintet sounds rather like a post-Brahmsian modernist having fun at the master’s expense, Rubbra, in his quietly original way, actually gets further away from his source and teaches us a good deal about himself and Brahms. Brahms naturally filled his music with plenty of contrapuntal interest, but he chose a manner of orchestration which absorbs it all into a warm glow of sound. Rubbra, on the other hand, chose instrumental colours which would pit one contrapuntal line against another. Some felt that this led to congested results in his first two symphonies. The Brahms arrangement actually follows the Second Symphony by two opus numbers and the mere fact that he attributed an opus number to it shows it was not intended as a money-spinner. Rather, it may represent a crucial stage in his search for a style of orchestration which would make all the contrapuntal lines clear without sounding unduly congested. Quite frankly, if you tuned into this unawares, and didn’t know the piano original, you might not even recognize it as Brahms. You might even recognize it as Rubbra. So, if you want something as near as possible to how Brahms would have done it, don’t go here. This is presumably why Toscanini went here only once. If you want a laugh and a half, go to the Schoenberg quintet arrangement. Taken on its own terms, Rubbra’s is a highly interesting experiment.
 
Fortunately Ashkenazy does take it on its own terms. I confess to not knowing his recording of the piano original. There are, however, numerous features of tempi and general style which sound just right here but which I would be surprised to find a pianist attempting. He and the orchestra seem to be enjoying themselves considerably. The first variation sounds like a polka! I find this very perceptive from a musician who has never, as far as I know, conducted a Rubbra symphony and may not even know there are any.
 
Enjoyment seems the name of the game in the Haydn Variations, too. This is the swiftest, lightest and most Schubertian account I’ve ever heard. At 16:41 it just beats the next quickest in my collection which is, wait for it, Klemperer (16:56) (I don’t have Toscanini). Klemperer obviously gives a very different kind of performance. At the other extreme Celibidache had already reached 20:20 in Naples in the 1960s so I tremble to think what he was doing by the time of his final Munich phase. In between come Janowski (17:16), Boult (17:25), Sawallisch (18:39), Hindemith (18:47) and Colin Davis (19:08). This is not a reasoned selection, they’re just recordings I happen to have. Some day it would be interesting to go into what all this means in terms of the single variations. Furtwängler, for example, used to dig deeply into some of the slower ones, giving them a Bachian gravitas, while he could be pretty volatile in the faster ones. Hindemith, although slower, is actually the closest to Ashkenazy in keeping it light and simple. I’m not going to throw out the darker-hued versions but Ashkenazy’s is a completely valid view. It is also about as far as can be imagined from the Brahmsian style developed over the years by Bernard Haitink, thus supporting my impression that the two were not well-paired.
 
The anonymous notes are good enough, but fancy not giving individual tracks for the variations.
 
Christopher Howell
 


 


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