BBC Music Magazine

Chamber

Beethoven

Violin Sonata No. 4 in A minor, Op. 23; Violin Sonata No. 5 in F, Op. 24 'Spring'; Violin Sonata No. 8 in G, Op. 30/3; German Dances, WoO 42; Rondo for Piano and Violin in G, WoO 41 James Ehnes (violin), Andrew Armstrong (piano) Onyx ONYX4208 69:02 mins

Record companies like composer brands, not least the Beethoven one. Music publishers liked it in Beethoven’s day too, and he was determinedly good at turning out the quantities of piano and chamber music that they wanted and would pay for.

The Violin Sonatas Nos 4 (in A minor, Op. 23) and 8 (in G major, Op. 30 No. 3) display all the qualities of an already formidable master-composer: the rhythmic drive whose forcefulness so amazed and disconcerted Beethoven’s early listeners, the epic range of moods, the moments of off-the-wall surprise. But not even the strength of James Ehnes’s playing – a feast of likeably gloss-free tone, magisterial technical command and flawless tuning – can quite transform the underlying feeling that both works sound relentlessly willed by their composer, rather than released by the deep self-expression that marks out vintage Beethoven.

Sure enough, the inspired Sonata (No. 5 in F major, Op. 24) sings and shines all the more beautifully in this company, and Ehnes responds

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Bonang Goes Pythagoras’s Theory Of Numerical Harmony
Did Pythagoras get it wrong? In the 6th century BC, the great polymath showed that certain numerical ratios between sounds are what makes music sound pleasant to us – and dissonance occurs when there’s a deviation from such ratios. But scientists in
BBC Music Magazine2 min read
Three Other Great Recordings
There’s something immensely organic about the way René Jacobs unfolds the narrative’s ineluctable trajectory in his version recorded in 2000. And for a conductor so often associated with a certain operatic flamboyance, some of the ‘agitato’ moments p
BBC Music Magazine3 min read
Ibiza Spain
Headphones adjusted, the conductor raises his arms. Strings twist and turn, the sound swells; electronic vocals ride the crest of the wave. The beat drops. Then, as lights flash across the Royal Albert Hall, glockenspiels duet over a keyboard motif.

Related