Schumann Fantasie; Kreisleriana; Romances
An overheated approach to Schumann
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Robert Schumann
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Sony Classical
Magazine Review Date: 2/2007
Media Format: Super Audio CD
Media Runtime: 78
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: 88697 00026-2
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Kreisleriana |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Andrea Kauten, Piano Robert Schumann, Composer |
Fantasie |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Andrea Kauten, Piano Robert Schumann, Composer |
(3) Romanzen, Movement: F sharp |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Andrea Kauten, Piano Robert Schumann, Composer |
(3) Romanzen, Movement: B |
Robert Schumann, Composer
Andrea Kauten, Piano Robert Schumann, Composer |
Author: Bryce Morrison
Andrea Kauten is a Hungarian-Swiss pianist who, according to Sony's fulsome notes, wishes everyone could be filled with her passion and intensity when she touches a piano. Later we are told of her “precise, highly Romantic (sic) manner of playing, which is rapturous yet controlled”. And so it is doubly disturbing to hear a pianist who cannot leave well alone.
Lacking clarity or perspective, Kauten cannot see the wood for the trees. The booklet-note reminder that she places “great importance on fidelity to the score” is flouted again and again. How can such a chaotic sense of rhythm be equated with the third Romance's marcato assai instruction? Again, in the Fantasie's second movement her stop-go rubato rears its ugly head to suggest a drunken rather than orderly march, and even the second Romance's heart-easing simplicity (for the beloved Clara, “the most beautiful love duet”) comes to us as if through a distorting mirror.
In the sehr langsam of Kreisleriana's fourth section you find her turning ornaments and phrases with a brusque indifference to their poetry and in the eighth section there is scarcely a hint of its mercurial and unsettling nature. Kauten has been well recorded but it is odd to omit the first Romance, and more generally, her over-heated readings hardly compare with transcendental versions of the Fantasie (Richter, Argerich, Pollini, etc) and Kreisleriana (Horowitz, Argerich, Anda, etc).
Lacking clarity or perspective, Kauten cannot see the wood for the trees. The booklet-note reminder that she places “great importance on fidelity to the score” is flouted again and again. How can such a chaotic sense of rhythm be equated with the third Romance's marcato assai instruction? Again, in the Fantasie's second movement her stop-go rubato rears its ugly head to suggest a drunken rather than orderly march, and even the second Romance's heart-easing simplicity (for the beloved Clara, “the most beautiful love duet”) comes to us as if through a distorting mirror.
In the sehr langsam of Kreisleriana's fourth section you find her turning ornaments and phrases with a brusque indifference to their poetry and in the eighth section there is scarcely a hint of its mercurial and unsettling nature. Kauten has been well recorded but it is odd to omit the first Romance, and more generally, her over-heated readings hardly compare with transcendental versions of the Fantasie (Richter, Argerich, Pollini, etc) and Kreisleriana (Horowitz, Argerich, Anda, etc).
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