Mozart:
Sonatas for Violin and Piano (complete).
Andrew Smith, violin; Joshua Pierce, piano. MSR Classics. $49.95 (6 CDs).
Very little of Mozart’s music receives backhanded compliments, as
opposed to forthright ones. There may be some not-quite-complimentary
commentary on an occasional incomplete work or one that seems to misfire, such
as the partial opera L’oca del Cairo,
but by and large, everything by Mozart is discussed with seriousness, often
bordering on awe, and with the most sincere appreciation of the musical
polymath’s genius in so many genres involving so many instruments.
Mozart’s violin works, though, tend to engender praise that sometimes
seems almost apologetic. His five violin concertos are frequently performed and
recorded, as are several short violin-and-orchestra pieces associated with the
completed concertos, but Mozart’s own strong preference for writing for and
performing on the piano tends to lead performers and commentators alike to give
these works somewhat short shrift. That applies even more strongly to Mozart’s
violin-and-piano sonatas – most of which the composer himself designated as for
piano and violin, lending further credence to the notion that Mozart’s own
performing skills on the violin (not to mention the viola!) never led him to a
genuine liking for the instrument.
The Andrew Smith/Joshua Pierce recording of Mozart’s complete
violin-and-piano sonatas (or piano-and-violin ones, if you prefer) gives the
lie, once and for all, to the notion that Mozart’s works of this type are
somehow not quite worthy of his other music. Smith and Pierce simply refuse to
apologize for or downplay any of these pieces, even lending their considerable
performance talents to the little sonatas written when the composer was all of
eight years old. This excellent six-CD MSR Classics release consists of live
recordings of half a dozen radio performances from 2019, and the circumstances
seem to have inspired Smith and Pierce, who deliver the works with ease, grace,
and that marvelous sense of camaraderie that chamber-music players seem to
achieve most strongly when they are not doing “take” after “take” in a
recording studio.
As fine as the playing is, the presentation of the sonatas is scarcely
without flaws. The instruments are modern ones, and while the performers
certainly have a good sense of Mozart’s style, it would be stretching things to
call these “historically informed” readings. The piano, in particular, is
significantly more sonorous than the instruments of Mozart’s time, and since in
many sonatas it already dominates the violin, there is frequently a greater
aural imbalance between the instruments than would ideally be the case – despite
microphone placement that favors the violin. There is also an extremely
peculiar arrangement of the music on the six CDs. For a comprehensive set of
discs such as this one, it would be most logical to present all the music
chronologically (so listeners could hear how the composer develops over time
and how the instrumental balance changes) – or to offer all the mature works in
sequence and then the juvenilia and fragments as a kind of appendix. Neither of
those approaches is used here – instead, there is a complete mishmash of
earlier and later works on most of the discs, resulting in a listening
experience that is frequently more jarring than informative. It would be
understandable if this had been the way the live radio shows were programmed,
with the discs duplicating the sequence that was broadcast, but that is not the
case at all. The CDs mix material from different
shows in ways that are thoroughly confusing. Disc 1, for example, has one
sonata from a February performance, then two from May, then two from April;
Disc 2 has two from January, then one from February, then two from May. And so
it goes – to such an extent that the assemblers of this recording obviously
became confused themselves, since Disc 5 inaccurately details the recording
dates of 16 tracks even though the CD contains only 12. There is really no
excuse for such a haphazard and disappointing arrangement of such worthy performances.
But be that as it may, what matters most in this release is how well
Smith and Pierce understand the music and how well they handle a number of its
challenges, notably including the differing balances between and treatment of instruments
in the various sonatas. They are also admirably sensitive to stylistic differentiation,
such as the use of galant style in KV
301-306; the deliberately simplified approach of the very last sonata (KV 547,
written for amateur performance and here included on a disc with works written
when Mozart was 10 years old); and the emotive but not-quite-profound feeling
of KV 304 (the only minor-key work among the sonatas, and the only instrumental
work of any kind that Mozart wrote in E minor). The final CD in the set
includes only the latest sonatas except for KV 547 – that is, KV 454, 481 and
526. The last of these, arguably the greatest of all these pieces, is offered
here with admirable restraint and gentility that show it to be well-constructed
and sensitively balanced, yet clearly part of a series dating back a remarkable
21 years: the earliest of these sonatas date to 1766, while KV 526 was written
in 1787.
Many fine violinists and pianists have made good cases for a selection of Mozart’s violin-and-piano sonatas, generally playing a dozen of them or fewer. Smith and Pierce offer all 26 completed works, plus a number of fragments or pieces completed by Maximilian Stadler after Mozart’s death. It is certainly fair to deem this recording “complete,” although it is worth pointing out that when it comes to Mozart’s works for these instruments, the matter is a touch complicated: for example, Smith and Pierce do not play the six early sonatas KV 10-15, because they are written for piano and violin but include an ad libitum cello part as well. Does that make them early trios or early entries in this series? Matters are not entirely straightforward in Mozart’s violin-and-piano works, or in his violin works as a whole. But certainly Smith and Pierce are successful here in playing the sonatas with involvement and joy, allowing them to bring forth the listening pleasure that Mozart tries to convey in his music for instruments of all sorts, very definitely including the violin.
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