There are 98
recordings of Ludwig van Beethoven’s monumental 33 Variations on a Waltz by
Anton Diabelli, Op.120 (1819-1822) in the current Arkiv Catalogue (accessed
19/03/19). Some will re-presentations of individual performances, and I guess
that there will be dozens of historical recordings that have not [yet] been
remastered and reissued. It is a phenomenal number. I admit straightway that I
have not compared recordings for this review. Beethoven is not my preferred
composer, so when I do listen to his music, it is likely to be an ‘old
favourite.’ And if I were to want to hear to the current work for pleasure
it would be in the Alfred Brendel recording released in 1990. It is simply an
age/historical thing!
I have reviewed this work played by Christina Bjørkoe, also on the Danacord label (DACOCD747), for MusicWeb International. I looked back at that assessment and realised that I had highlighted the
fact that her playing time was 72:31, whereas Brendel clocked in at 52: 36. I
noted that Bjørkoe seemed to play every repeat.
I am not a Beethoven scholar, so I am not sure what the currently accepted
rules are for these ‘repeats’ in the context of the Diabelli Variations. All I
remember is that it made a long work. On the other hand, Bjørkoe’s performance
did catch my imagination, despite its length. Gustav Piekut’s reading is just
under the hour, so I guess it is more traditional in duration.
Just to remind the
listener of the historical background of the Diabelli Variations. The work
resulted as a commission from the composer/publisher Anton Diabelli for a
single variation from thirty-three composers. The proceeds of the volume were
to go to the widows of fallen soldiers in the Napoleonic Wars. It was to be based in a short piece in waltz
time that he (Diabelli) had composed. This theme has been described as ‘banal’, ‘trite’ and ‘a beer hall
waltz’: it is certainly no masterpiece. Unfortunately for poor old Diabelli,
Beethoven declined the offer to provide a contribution, but then decided to
write all 33 variations himself! What happened to the original concept: did
Schubert, Czerny and Hummel contribute?
The answer is Yes! It comprises Part II of Vaterländischer Künstlerverein and ended up with variations contributed by 51
composers, many of whom are now long-forgotten. Part I was Beethoven’s offering,
composed during 1819 and revised in
1822-23.
Tradition has it
that composing the Variations 'amused Beethoven to a rare degree' and that it was written 'in a rosy
mood' that was 'bubbling with unusual humour' (Anton Schindler cited by Alfred Brendel).
Even a non-Beethoven enthusiast like myself can see that the theme has
potential, despite its ordinariness. Beethoven created a work that evolves from
the opening tune. This is a cumulative piece: not one that can have odd
variations extracted for standalone performance. So, really, the listener must
dedicate an hour of their life, sit down, and attend from end to end. Beethoven
extracts virtually everything of value from the ‘theme’: this includes harmonic
devices, rhythms and melodic phrases. Virtually every pianistic device known to
composers of Beethoven’s generation including nods to J.S. Bach, fughetta,
tremolos, octaves and a powerful balance between ‘advanced’ dissonance and naïve triadic harmonies are presented. But overall, what a listener expects, and the pianist must provide is a consistent narrative
that somehow moulds this massive collection of seemingly disparate music into a
powerful synthesis. This fusion must lead towards the massive fugue - the penultimate
variation. For me, Gustav Piekut manages to present the whole structure, the
continuity and the technical virtuosity of these variations with power, grace,
humour and understanding.
I was disappointed
with the liner notes. Firstly, they are printed with an eye-watering yellow
font on a black background. Why do record companies go for ‘arty’ rather than
‘utility’? The actual notes are short, but they are succinct and give the
potential listener all the information required including a brief biography of the
pianist. They are given in Danish and English.
I have not come
across Gustav Piekut before. According to the CD flyer, he is hot property ‘as
one of the most interesting young classical musicians in Scandinavia.’ Piekut
was born in 1995 (making him 24 this year) and made his debut aged 12 with the
South Jutland Symphony Orchestra. He has won a slew of awards including the
Dublin International Piano Competition and the Aarhus International Competition
in 2017. He gained 1st Prize at the Danish National Steinway Piano
Festival ‘three consecutive times.’ He now regularly travels across Europe
giving recitals and playing concertos. The present disc is his debut recording.
It is a tall order
to play what Alfred Brendel has described as ‘the greatest of all piano works.’ I am not sure I agree with the final part of this analysis, but I get
his point. But taking his opinion at
face value, the present performance is certainly worthy of Brendel’s accolade.
With thanks to MusicWeb International where this
review was first published.
Track Listing:
Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
33 Variations on a Waltz by Anton Diabelli, Op.120 (1819-1823) [59:05]
Gustav Piekut (piano)
Rec. September 2018, Lundsgaard Gods,
Kerteminde, Denmark
DANACORD DACOCOD 837 [59:05]
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