Performing Arts

Advertising

What to do in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas

Make This Your Home Page

Get GuideLive Newsletters

Paul Lewis' Beethoven piano sonatas lovely, but a bit too British

12:00 AM CDT on Saturday, May 17, 2008

Scott Cantrell

Beethoven

B+Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4.

Lewis (Harmonia Mundi, three CDs)

FINISHING UP: With this three-disc folder, British pianist Paul Lewis completes his survey of the Beethoven piano sonatas. Of the 10 sonatas included here, only the Pastorale, Les Adieux and Op. 109-111 are repertory staples.

THOUGHTFUL: Much praised, especially in the British press, this Alfred Brendel protégé is nothing if not an able, thoughtful musician. Listen to the opening movement of Op. 109 and you'll hear a deft balance of eagerness and elegance. Sonics are warm, with plenty of space around the piano.

AND YET: For all the lovely pianism, isn't there something more to Beethoven? One hears only the tiniest hints of the music's wit, its flirting with danger, its ecstasy – all more strikingly realized in Andras Schiff's new Beethoven cycle on ECM. And Mr. Lewis misses the songlike qualities of the variation themes in Op. 109 and 111; the former is too foursquare, the latter too slow.

BOTTOM LINE: Lovely, thoughtful performances, but just a bit too well-behaved – too, well, British.

Scott Cantrell

This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow. This text is invisible on the page, but this text is affected by the invisible item's flow.

Advertising

© 2008 The Dallas Morning News, Inc.