天才ベズイデンホウト、モーツァルト・ソロ作品集第2弾。鮮烈なハ短調ソナタ!
モーツァルトの再来とも賞される天才フォルテピアノ奏者ベズイデンホウト、待望のソロ第2弾の登場。これしかありえないような自然なテンポ設定、気持ちよいくらいにはまっているデュナーミクの付け方、聴き手にとっても必然的かつ絶妙な間の取り方など、何度も聴いたことのある作品たちの音符ひとつひとつが鮮やかに香りたちます。イ短調のロンドの語り口の巧さは絶品です。ハ短調ソナタの有名な冒頭では一変、現代ピアノで聴くよりも表情がダイレクトに伝わってきます。ロ短調のアダージョでの慟哭と、音と音の間に流れる空気に、このベズイデンホウトという演奏者の底知れぬ魅力をみます。演奏者の息遣いまでをも巧みにとらえた録音も秀逸。フォルテピアノという楽器がもつ無限の表情と可能性を感じる1枚でもあります。
キングインターナショナル
発売・販売元 提供資料(2010/11/30)
South African-born keyboardist Kristian Bezuidenhout seems to search for a middle ground between those who treat the fortepiano as a kind of modified harpsichord and those who stress the ways its percussive potential can highlight the incipient Romantic qualities in music of the late 18th century. On this collection of Mozart piano works, he makes full use of the potential of his instrument, a copy by American-Czech builder Paul McNulty of an 1802 Viennese instrument by Anton Walter, often deploying the pedals to develop a range of sounds that take on added color from the unequal-temperament tuning. Yet his basic mode of playing is not terribly expressive. The combination works well in the muscular works that bookend the album, with the lower ranges of the McNulty fortepiano bringing out the full Beethovenian power of the Piano Sonata in C minor, K. 457 (played, unusually, without its introductory Fantasia in C minor, K. 475), and of the rather symphonic Piano Sonata in C major, K. 330. The smaller pieces at the center of the program suffer a bit from the relatively inflexible melodic idiom. To give great pathos to the bleak Rondo in A minor, K. 511, and Adagio in B minor, K. 540, may be to rely too much on knowledge of what was coming next stylistically, but the Adagio is taken at something more than the designated clip, and there's room for more emotion here than Bezuidenhout allows. Some variation is justifiable in repeats, but Bezuidenhout pushes the envelope; the flourish in the exposition repeat of the Adagio in B minor seems at odds with the exhausted, enervated quality of the music. The main attraction here may be the fortepiano itself, with its strong, clear tone; it begins to approach a grand in power, but the colors are different. Harmonia Mundi's studio sound is excellent and fully attuned to Bezuidenhout's rereading of the big sonatas. Notes are in English, French, and German.
Rovi