Andrea Lucchesini first came to my attention in 2005, when 
                  I found his then-new cycle of the complete Beethoven piano sonatas 
                  for about twenty-five pounds online. The cycle is a box set 
                  of live recordings from a spectacular month-long marathon of 
                  Italian recitals, and appeared on an Italian label, Stradivarius. 
                  As suddenly as it had surfaced it vanished, leaving me with 
                  a copy and, at the time of this writing, leaving little evidence 
                  of its existence behind on the Internet. There remain some truly 
                  ecstatic reviews and a handful of websites offering visitors 
                  the opportunity to download it illegally. 
                  
                  Forgive this one-paragraph digression: this paragraph describes 
                  Beethoven and not Schubert, yes, but it also illustrate Lucchesini’s 
                  aims as a performer. Lucchesini’s Beethoven is beautiful. I 
                  know “beautiful” is an overused, indeed meaningless, word in 
                  the world of music reviews, but it is the most descriptive word 
                  available because it describes not just his style but his purpose. 
                  Lucchesini’s goal throughout the cycle is to treat the music 
                  as if it is the epitome of tonal beauty. He can play with force, 
                  he can bring out the drama in sonatas like the Appassionata, 
                  and he is a master of the music’s architecture: his “Hammerklavier” 
                  inspired the praise of Luciano Berio, whose complete piano works 
                  Lucchesini then recorded. (The Berio disc has been praised elsewhere 
                  on this site.) Lucchesini is at his best, though, letting the 
                  music glow, tapping inexhaustible reserves of melody, and making 
                  the piano sound feather-light. His soft playing is some of the 
                  most gorgeous I know. The few non-Italians lucky enough to get 
                  their hands on the Beethoven box before its extinction all say 
                  the same things: Lucchesini’s view dazzles quietly, not with 
                  pyrotechnics but with poetry. 
                  
                  I should be reviewing this new Schubert CD, rather than an out-of-print 
                  Beethoven sonata cycle. But I describe the Beethoven in depth 
                  because the same qualities which characterize Lucchesini’s Beethoven 
                  also bless his Schubert, and in his quest for lyrical beauty, 
                  Andrea Lucchesini never loses sight of Schubert’s mastery of 
                  form. This is essential listening. 
                  
                  Lucchesini cannot be characterized as a “fast” or “slow” player. 
                  His tendency is towards care of the music’s needs, and that 
                  means his approach varies: this Impromptu D899 No. 1 is one 
                  of the slowest around, at eleven minutes exceeded in my collection 
                  only by Javier Perianes and Tzimon Barto, but the performance 
                  of the famous G flat impromptu is comparatively fleet. Tempo 
                  is not the watchword here, but expression: the accompaniment 
                  to the G flat’s beloved main melody takes flight on the light 
                  wings of a butterfly and enjoys a wondrous sense of ‘floating’ 
                  mid-air, the beginning of the E flat unfurls like a flag - with 
                  beautifully judged rubato which changes on the repeat. The trio 
                  portion of the A flat D899 demonstrates that Lucchesini really 
                  knows how to build a dramatic musical narrative. He has a keen 
                  ear for rhythm, too; listen to the E flat’s middle section, 
                  with its lurching emphasis on the first beat, as it makes the 
                  transition back to the opening. This is piano playing which 
                  commands respect and is enchanting, too. 
                  
                  The impromptus D935 enjoy the same qualities: the way that, 
                  from 3:10 to 4:45 in the first F minor, Lucchesini very slowly 
                  draws back the curtain on the impromptu’s glowing heart. The 
                  opening of No. 2 is intoned with elegant simplicity. The variations 
                  of No. 3 captures both Schubert the classicist (the structure 
                  influenced by Beethoven, the language by Haydn) and Schubert 
                  the romantic (the singing beauty of every line!). Everywhere 
                  there are impeccably done transitions back into the main themes. 
                  Lucchesini has the technique to dispatch the last impromptu’s 
                  challenge with ease and with enough flair to suggest both the 
                  famous ‘march’ in F minor from the Moments musicaux and, 
                  in the coda, the F minor Ballade of Chopin. 
                  
                  I am making this ‘Recording of the Month’ because, now that 
                  Andrea Lucchesini has finally got a widely available CD, I want 
                  to encourage the record companies to permit him more. He can 
                  record whatever he wants and I will be listening! And if some 
                  enterprising label’s management happens to be reading this: 
                  do license his Beethoven cycle from Stradivarius. Naxos, it’s 
                  been twenty years since you released a set of the thirty-two. 
                  Perhaps you can do the honors? 
                  
                  And to piano lovers who do not know the name Lucchesini: here 
                  is your chance. This is intimate, rather than dramatic, Schubert, 
                  but for sheer poetry and polish it can hardly be beaten. Warm, 
                  clear sound quality completes the delightful package. 
                  
                  Brian Reinhart