Having thoroughly enjoyed the first four instalments
of Bavouzet’s projected cycle of the Haydn piano sonatas (see reviews
of
Volume
2 and
Volume
3), I was overjoyed when this CD arrived for review. As each volume
appears, Bavouzet goes from strength to strength. Listening to the earlier
volumes, I was so impressed, it spurred me on to resurrect and mug up on
some of the sonatas I’d learned many years ago.
Haydn composed his piano sonatas between 1750 and 1795 and, for reasons
unknown, avoided the genre for the remaining fourteen years of his life.
His influences were the harpsichord style of Georg Christoph Wagenseil (1715-1777)
in the early works up until 1760. C.P.E. Bach (1714-1788) was a later voice
and the development of the Broadwood pianos Haydn came across in London
in the 1780s also had its impact. Together with his symphonies and string
quartets, we can see in the piano sonata oeuvre, Haydn’s contribution
to the evolution of sonata form.
On this CD, Bavouzet offers us a selection of earlier and later sonatas.
As in the previous volumes, one gets the immediate impression that he clearly
loves these works and plays them with great commitment. They are marked
out with stylish phrasing and crisp and incisive playing. Repeats are ornamented
and all embellishments are in style, tastefully done and with great attention
to detail. Some may find his tempi rather brisk, but I find they work and
are well judged. What I like with these sonatas is the infectious wit, the
vigour, the
joie de vivre and the pervasive element of surprise.
Although Haydn’s piano sonatas have never had the enduring popularity
and exposure to the concert-going public as those of Mozart and Beethoven
there are, nevertheless, some excellent Haydn sonata recordings out there.
I first got to know these works with the ‘ground-breaking’ survey
of John McCabe issued on Decca (443785). This was followed by a selection
of eleven sonatas and shorter pieces recorded by Alfred Brendel (Philips
416 643) on four CDs. Schiff, Hamelin, Jandó and Buchbinder have
also made valuable contributions to the discography.
The Potton Hall acoustic lends a bright, sonorous ambience to the proceedings.
Documentation is spot-on, setting the works in a historical context. Bavouzet
contributes his own enlightening thoughts.
Chandos offer a Haydn series marked by great distinction. I hope that the
next volume will not be too long delayed.
Stephen Greenbank
Bavouzet goes from strength to strength with each successive volume in the
series.