Mentioned in the
current issue of The Gramophone is an interesting remark by
Johannes Brahms after hearing Pierre Monteux and the Geloso
String Quartet in Vienna play one of his string quartets: "It
takes the French to understand my music. The Germans play it too
heavily". I thought of this today when re-listening to Leonidas
Kavakos and Yuja Wang playing Brahms' three duo sonatas
for violin and piano. The first movement of the G major sonata strays
into the red in my timing chart (11 minutes and 11 seconds) but it
does not sound too slow, because the two players keep the
rhythm flowing and the pulse constant. This Greek-Chinese duo may be
some way from a “French approach”, but it really works as far as
I am concerned. We are a long way from the beefy Brahms of much of
the Russian / Israeli / Juilliard school which can invoke images of
the Brahms of north Germany and Eisbein mit Sauerkraut und
Kartoffeln (a culinary dish, incidentally, that I really like).
Kavakos comes over here
as a gentle soul, for most of the time; Wang as mercurial. As a duo,
they fulfil my requirement of dividing my interest and admiration
between the violin playing and the piano, with neither out-classing
the other (a factor that almost always rules out the great Jascha
Heifetz as a contender in duo sonatas). They also fulfil my
requirement of violinist and pianist being equals (in duo
sonatas such as these) and both being first-rate instrumentalists. I
have been an admirer of Kavakos for many, many years; an admirer of
young Yuja Wang for a much shorter time. But I sincerely hope they do
more duo sonatas together. For a start, they so obviously listen
to each other when playing. When the music gives the piano the floor,
Ms Wang takes it. When the music gives the violin the floor, Leonidas
takes it.
Brahms knew what he was
doing when he wrote three first-rate sonatas for violin and piano
that would fit comfortably on one CD. There are many, many competing
versions of the three on record. But Kavakos and Yuja are certainly
easily within my top three or four. With many versions of these
works, I sit back and let the music wash over me. With Kavakos and
Yuja, however, I find myself listening intently to both instruments
as they duet together. Bravo.
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