Hubeau’s set was recorded 
                in roughly a six-month period between 1988 and 1989. It’s been 
                handily repackaged in an attractive green slimline box housing 
                four CDs. Hubeau is something of a talisman for Fauré chamber 
                playing and his well-loved early 1960s recordings of the cello 
                sonatas with Paul Tortelier shows just how acute and perceptive 
                his understanding was. A quarter of a century later he set down 
                the complete solo piano works. There are many special and treasurable 
                things here but equally there are disappointments.
                
              
He 
                  plays the Nocturnes with limpid and rounded tone abetted 
                  by a warmly intimate recording. So much in his playing is attractive 
                  that it seems churlish to nitpick but it must be done. Try the 
                  E flat minor Op.33 No.1. Hubeau is attractive but he lacks the 
                  greater sense of vertical dynamism of Jean Philippe Collard 
                  (EMI but also now on Brilliant Classics 93007), much less the 
                  more incendiary pianism of Germaine Thyssens-Valentin (Testament; 
                  Préludes SBT1400; Barcarolles and Thème et Variations SBT1215; 
                  Nocturnes SBT1262; and the smaller pieces on SBT1263). His basic 
                  tempo in the B minor Op.97 is the same as Collard’s but the 
                  latter is more evocative, his colours more interventionist, 
                  his playing more suggestive and the rhythms more subtly pointed. 
                  Hubeau’s F sharp minor Op.104 No.1 is beautifully done; the 
                  phrasing is delightful but isn’t it just a touch bland?  Collard 
                  offers a more characterful and active solution; he peaks and 
                  crests more arrestingly. Even more revealing is the extraordinary 
                  way Thyssens-Valentin explores the complexity and modernity 
                  of Fauré’s harmonies.
                
The Impromptus 
                  have similar virtues of musicality and tone but listen to the 
                  more earthbound Hubeau rhythm in comparison with, say, Collard’s 
                  playfully free A flat major Op.26. The difference is palpable. 
                  Collard’s syntax is altogether more engaging and warmer in the 
                  Barcarolles. Hubeau’s A minor is a halting, rather lumbering 
                  affair by the side of Collard’s. The latter too sounds very 
                  different from the compellingly introvert slowness propounded 
                  by Thyssens-Valentin whose free rubati bring a sense of improvised 
                  introspection to the piece. Hubeau also tends to shy away from 
                  the sheer strangeness of, for example, the Barcarolle in D minor 
                  Op.90, tending to smooth over or elide its sharper, more dangerous 
                  corners.
                
I wouldn’t wish 
                  to suggest – and I don’t think I have – that Hubeau is anything 
                  other than a poetic and warm player. I’ve heard some strange 
                  recital discs from French players of late whose wintry approach 
                  is at total odds to the music and leaves me baffled at their 
                  indifference. There’s never anything of that sort with Hubeau. 
                  His Thème et Variations is in many ways attractive though 
                  not consistently so. And the Préludes are also inconsistent. 
                  The C sharp minor is rather heavy – turn to the more incisive, 
                  eager Collard. And I find the D minor very disappointingly heavy 
                  from the outset.
                
I think my conclusion 
                  will be fairly clear. These are attractive but small-scaled, 
                  poetic but sometimes unengaged performances. They are often 
                  tonally beautiful but equally   too often lack that sense of 
                  engagement and frisson that animates the better and best performances. 
                  Paul Crossley has been highly praised but I have always preferred 
                  Collard. He was young when he recorded the piano works and he 
                  had insight, and was in rapid communion with the music. His 
                  engagement was – and remains – wonderful to hear. Then there’s 
                  Thyssens-Valentin, where there are competing recordings, for 
                  a great Fauré player of an older generation.
                
Jonathan Woolf