Maria Joao Pires · Le Voyage Magnifique

Posted By: platico

Maria Joâo Pires · Le Voyage Magnifique · Schubert Impromptus
FLAC 326 MB | MP3 HQ 164 MB | Booklet | Covers | EAC Log | 1997





Maria Joâo Pires takes us on a truly magnificent journey in the company of Schubert Photo DGIStemer ip Le Voyage Magnifique Schubert Impromptus - D899; D935. Drei Klavierstticke, D946. Allegretto in C minor, D9I5. Maria Joao Pires (pt).

DG 0 0 457 550-2G1-12 (two discs: 108 minutes: DDD).

This is something very special indeed. Maria Joilo Pires's two-disc set of Schubert's impromptus, significantly dedicated to Sviatoslav Richter, contains a booklet in which standard notes are replaced by carefully chosen extracts from Pires's own reading: reflections on time, space and wilderness from Yves Simon's Le voyageur magnifique; meditations on Schubert as Wanderer: and thoughts from a neuroscientist on the "physiology" of great music. Like so many prefaces, these words are best read afterwards, when certain fragments, different for each listener, may well close-focus in the mind elements still resonating in the ear. And in the spirit, too: for the neuroscientist's words on great music apply equally to great performance - certainly as one recognizes it here.

Pires's characteristic impassioned absorption in all she plays-that concentration which makes the listener appear to be eavesdropping on secrets shared between friends-could hardly find a truer soul mate than in the sensibility of Schubert. Each Impromptu has a rare sense of integrity and entirety, born of acute observation, long-pondered responses and, I sense, long wanderings throughout Schubert's musical world at large.

To analyse such entirety is to reduce it: a reviewer can only point to certain manifestations. To Pires's instinct for tempo and pacing, for instance, which brings a sense of constant restraint, a true molto moderato to the Allegro of the C minor work from D899, created by a fusion of right-hand tenuto here with momentary left hand rubato there. Then there is the clarity of contour within the most subtly graded undertones of the G flat major of D899 which re-creates it as a seemingly endless song. Or an Andante just slow, just nonchalant enough for the Rosamunde theme of the D935 B flat major to give each variation space and breath enough to sing out its own sharply defined character.
The Allegretto, D915 acts as a Pause' between the two discs, a resting place, as it were, for reflection and inner assessment on this long journey. Its end -which could as well be its beginning- is in the Drei Klavierstikke, D946 of 1828. The first draws back from the fiery impetuousness within the Allegro assars tautly controlled rhythms, to an inner world with its own time scale; the second, more transpired than played, has an almost unbearable poignancy of simplicity.

The paradox of these totally unselfregarding performances is how unmistakably they speak and sing out Pires and her unique musicianship. To draw comparisons here would be not so much odious as simply to miss the point. HF. Gramophone. May 1998 Page 64


Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

CD1
Impromptus D 899
No. 1 in C minor, Allegro molto moderato
No. 2 in E flat major, Allegro
No. 3 in G flat major, Andante
No. 4 in A flat major, Allegretto - Trio
Allegretto D 915

CD2
Impromptus D 935
No. 1 in F minor, Allegro moderato
No. 2 in A flat major, Allegretto - Trio
No. 3 in B flat major, Thema. Andante - Var. I-V
No. 4 in F minor, Allegro scherzando
Drei Impromptus Aus Dem Nachlass D 946







PW: aire