No sooner had I put down Imogen Cooper’s Schumann
recording on Chandos (see
review)
than I was up for another
Fantasiestücke from Freddy Kempf
on BIS. I hugely admire his Prokofiev concertos recording for the same
label (see
review),
so the opportunity to hear some of his solo Schumann was an opportunity
not to be missed.
The Potton Hall location is a current favourite for chamber music and
piano recordings, excellent results being produced from there by the likes
of
Noriko
Ogawa. Different repertoire calls for different approaches, but it
is interesting to hear a sunny and light sound from Ogawa’s Mozart
disc, where this Schumann is distinctly darker and more mid-range heavy.
It’s like the difference between brand new oak panels and those
weathered by a patina of time. This is a good piano sound, bringing out
a full bass sonority and nice warmth of expression. You might initially
want to push it through your speakers with a little more volume than normal
to gain the full picture, but by the end of the
Études symphoniques
you will know all about this Steinway D, and might even find its serial
number has imprinted itself onto your left woofer.
Comparing Kempf with Cooper in the
Fantasiestücke is an education.
The opening,
Des Abends, is given plenty of rubato by Cooper, who
uses a swifter tempo to draw out exquisite shapes from that melodic line.
Kempf is slower but straighter, preferring to make time stand still in
a movement of rapt wonder. There is something to be said for either approach,
but it’s like comparing two entirely different pieces. The drama
of the following
Aufschwung is a compelling and urgently poetic
drama from Kempf, swifter than Cooper, who spends more time layering dynamics
and bringing out the different melodic voices from top, middle and bass.
There is a coherence to Kempf’s approach and a satisfying sense
of character from his playing here, but he does miss that rhapsodic sense
that certain passages might have been plucked from the A minor
Piano
Concerto.
The Cooper/Kempf comparison continues in this vein with Kempf pulling
the music around less, but still bringing out masses of expression and
such beauty of tone that it sometimes seems like an angel has landed on
the piano lid and given voice. I love Cooper’s playing and still
do even after the Kempf experience, but there are numerous places where
his directness of approach with the material brought out a little ‘ah’
of startled amazement. Take
In der Nacht for instance, where Kempf
keeps us in a state of nervous anticipation with his dynamic extremes.
Cooper is also wonderful here, but makes those expulsions of sound a touch
more shapely in a slightly slower tempo, and is therefore less nervy and
anxious sounding. If you want your Schumann to shake you up in the darkness
of the night then Kempf is your man. The only place he makes me itchy
is in the character theme which opens
Fabel, played so slowly it
makes me anxious for the wrong reasons. This is a theme with vital personal
associations for Schumann but isn’t much more than a cadence. Play
it expressively by all means, but stretching it beyond the lyrical doesn’t
add to its meaning in my view.
Blumenstück is a fine piece, and one of the two manuscripts
Schumann gave to his bride Clara in 1840 as a gift on their wedding. Kempf’s
performance is uncontroversial, swifter than Horowitz in his classic Columbia
recording, and less extreme in bringing out the melodic lines. Kempf creates
and maintains an intimate feel with the piece, not burdening it with too
much added poetry or perfume.
Schumann’s
Études symphoniques have been the subject
of a certain amount of push and pull with regard to editions and composer’s
intentions, and the booklet helpfully tells us that Kempf’s version
is based on Schumann’s own 1852 revisions, plus two movements left
out from the 1837 version, and including five variations composed in 1834
but not published until 1890. In other words, ‘the full works’
is what we have here, and magnificently played by Freddy Kempf, with elegance
and technical fluidity, as well as keeping all of that nervous tension
and rapidity of mood change which these grandly arching sequences of variations
demand.
I first caught a whiff of Pierre-Laurent Aimard’s recording of this
work on one of those promo collections (see
review),
but his 2006 live Warner Classics recording, while not quite as complete
as Freddy Kempf’s, is a very good choice for its vibrancy and lack
of pretension. A more full-fat version can be had on the Regis Alto label
with Alfred Brendel, though this swings towards the kind of individualist
stance which both Aimard and Kempf have tended to avoid, at times giving
the music added layers of interpretation which can make following the
score a trial for the uninitiated. Sviatoslav Richter is the one to go
for from the Regis label if you are out for a bargain. There are myriad
more or less recent versions, including another remarkable but also rather
personalised performance from Mikhail Pletnev on Deutsche Grammophon,
Ivo Pogerelich’s at times painfully slow and ‘deep’
recording from the same label, and Murray Perahia’s rather decent
but hard to find CBS recording, the list goes on… I rooted out my
copy of Sergei Edelmann’s performance on the Triton label (see
review)
to make a comparison with something on SACD and this remains a fine performance,
though not up to Freddy Kempf’s standard - just compare the way
Kempf makes something almost akin to Shostakovich out of the remarkable
Variation 7 [Étude VIII] and you won’t be going back
to Edelmann, good though he is.
Freddy Kempf to my mind offers the best of these various worlds while
of course creating one of his own. He equals the warmth of sonority and
sense of anticipation in Brendel’s opening
Thema without
pulling at the rhythms, and at each point of contact - leaving aside the
lesser-known variations - comes up trumps in terms of tempo and communication.
The suspensions of
Étude III for instance are nicely stressed
without distorting the flow of the music, and the tempo is just right
for the traversing notes to create harmonic colour without drawing attention
away from the melody. Schumann can be fantastically banal in this piece,
and Kempf responds to the plod of
Variation 3 [Étude IV]
with an imperturbable touch between the proverbial rock and the other
hard place. Excitement aplenty is to be had, for instance in the rapid
Agitato of
Variation 5, and the whole thing is a white-knuckle
ride through the following
Allegro Molto during which the safety
of the bass strings seems at risk. It’s not all drama, and the sensitivities
of several of the
op. posth. variations and the penultimate
Variation
9 all create their own intimate spaces, the sense of danger from Schumann
the actor and teller of scary stories is however never very far away.
You may already have a big bucketful of Schumann, and will probably be
wondering if this is worth adding to this deepening resource in these
stricken times. If you are a fan of the
Études symphoniques
then I would say a resounding yes. You may check your version and see
if it has all of those missed out variations, in which case you will want
a more complete version in any case. Freddy Kempf makes the case for this
edition most emphatically, and the standard never dips. The
Blumenstück
is a nice extra but not decisive, but if you are looking for a
Fantasiestücke
with plenty of imagination but a bit less added
Fantasie then this
is the place to try anew. BIS’s recording is magnificent, and by
the end of the
Finale of the
Études symphoniques
you will be able to reconstruct the grand piano in your living room by
ear alone. Yes, it really
is that big.
Dominy Clements
Yes, it really is that big.