
THE
SCHUBERT RECORDINGS
VOLUME I
Sonata in B-flat major, Op. posth, D.960
Allegretto in C minor, D.915
Six Moments Musicaux, Op.94, D.780
JOSHUA
PIERCE
$14.95 ~ MS1204
"Joshua
Pierce is a talented pianist... [he] is a knowing guide to the B-flat major
sonata …Pierce’s approach is rhetorical, constantly questioning and probing…He
finds power and lyricism side by side in a fluent reading of the andante … The
scherzo is bright and breezy … The finale makes a strong impression … Pierce’s
skill and polish are never in doubt ... the rare and diminutive Allegretto in C
minor is a welcome inclusion and is played contemplatively by Pierce …There is
a deliberate confidence to Pierce’s performances of the Moments Musicaux
proper, with pathos beneath the beauty and dark colours very much to the fore
… this is impressive Schubert playing, with judicious pedalling, vivid
contrast in tone colour, finely tuned dynamic control and a natural rubato …The
recorded sound is sympathetically warm … this is a disc worth hearing, and
taster of what may prove to be a valuable Schubert series."
MusicWeb International ~
January 2008
"[Joshua
Pierce] applied his mind and heart to every phrase. Nothing is straightforward;
everything is interpreted, and there's a reason behind every gesture. It is nice
to hear such thoughtful playing..[Pierce's Schubert] sounds like Schubert, not
Beethoven. It is still sweet-natured and easy-going rather than temperamental.
Tempos are not ponderous...in the Moments Musicaux Mr. Pierce phrases things
beautifully, and there's even some atmosphere - some poetry to add to the
meaningful prose..."
American Record Guide ~
November / December
2007
"Pierce's
interpretations of Schubert's B-flat Sonata and Moments Musicaux convey
undeniable enthusiasm, energy and sincerity...[a] gifted, charismatic pianist...Pierce's
driving left hand generates gripping momentum in [Moment] No.5. Note, too, the
eloquent lyricism he brings to No.4's Trio and the second and sixth
pieces...Simplicity and beauty also distinguish his well proportioned account of
the Allegretto. MSR's excellent engineering accurately mirrors the dulcet,
singing sonority that Pierce carries with him from concert to concert and piano
to piano"
Gramophone ~ October
2007
"After
his terrific set of Beethoven concertos, it's no surprise that Joshua Pierce
offers a distinguished Schubert disc. The B-flat Sonata is lyrically played, but
with great rhythmic acuity. Pierce takes chances in response to the dramatic
possibilities of Schubert's phrases, all of which work effortlessly. The disc
includes the Allegretto, D.915 and an impressive performance of the six Moment
Musicaux."
Turok's Choice ~
October
2007
"One
of the greatest challenges any pianist can take on is that of presenting the
music of Schubert in a way that gets at the emotional depth beneath his
simplicity, without resorting to exaggerated romantic bombast. Joshua Pierce
does so as well as any on this fine program... Brilliant."
CD HotList ~ September
2007
"Two
generations ago this all-Schubert recital would have been one by Artur Schnabel.
Joshua Pierce...plays
the posthumous B-flat Sonata in a literalist, non-pedantic style, with a
fine sense of the dramatic rumbles and pauses that afflict Schubert's pointed
thoughts on emotional loss. If Pierce's playing reminds me of anyone else's, it
is Claude Frank... Pierce handles the agitated triplets and harmonic shifts in the
first movement smoothly and on a large scale... Pierce evokes a high, tense
singing-line, and he projects the intricate left-hand bass harmonies without
forcing them... Pierce [is] attentive to the
enharmonic moves Schubert likes to make to change tone colors. The A
Major spun-out melody by Pierce quite sings a song worthy of Keats...When Pierce wants the golden hammer, he uses
it, only to transform the percussion into silver bells... Pregnant
pauses, an outburst of passion, and attention to harmonic colors [in Moments
Musicaux] set Pierce's
rendition along some fine realizations, not the least of which is that by Rudolf
Serkin on CBS."
Audiophile Audition ~ July 2007
"Pierce makes the most of [Schubert's pauses], leapfrogging the Romantic
era and making Schubert into something of a troubled modern. The tension in the first movement's opening
melody precedes the ominous left-hand trill at the end of the first phrase;
Pierce takes a good deal of time in the melody itself, and treats it not as a
moment of repose but as a source of momentum. The first movement as a whole is
fraught with forward motion interrupted by passages of near stasis... the 6
Moments Musicaux are fresh and
arresting as Pierce lingers over their mood shifts...[The performance is] challenging, occasionally puzzling, but
never dull."
All Music Guide ~ June 2007
"Pianist
Joshua Pierce gets off to a great start in Vol. 1 of what
promises to be a series of Franz Schubert’s piano music with the Sonata in
B-flat Major, D.960 and the Moments Musicaux, D.780, with the sprightly
Allegretto, D.915 as attractive filler. He approaches the opening movement of
the sonata in a straightforward manner, preferring to capture the abundant
beauties /en passant/, without too much fuss over the pauses that follow the
remarkable trill in the bass that we hear from time to time, as if the piano
were compelled to testify under oath to memories too painful to recall. In this
movement, the melodies are
deceptively simple, at first just a cluster of notes around the home key. But
what Schubert does in developing them is something else. How often merely a
slight change in meter or a striking key shift, often without modulation, will
change the entire mood of a passage! There is a fatalistic current underlying
the most innocent melodies – my pet name for it is “the Schubert Undertow”
– and Pierce is sensitive to its presence. The slow movement is a solemn
prayer – with an anguished moment of reflection before the final solace. The
Scherzo is a quicksilver Allegro Vivace with a curious little humpbacked dance
as trio. The finale is fast and furious, belying the qualifying phrase “ma non
troppo” which refers basically to the tentative, hesitant nature of the
opening figure. The high dynamic level selected by Joshua Pierce for this
movement and the steady tempos he employs throughout the work are in
marked contrast to the more introspective approach used by Andrew Rangell on
Bridge 9153, which I previously reviewed in this column, and, at 40:01 his
timing for the sonata is seven minutes quicker. Both approaches, I should add,
are valid. In
Schubert’s Moments Musicaux, a landmark in the Romantic genre of poetic
character pieces, striking changes in mood and mode prevail in four of the six
pieces. All these pieces have distinct characters, from Moment #1 which unfolds
like a gradually evolving walk through nature to the solemnity of Moment #6, a
nocturne in all but name, but one in which the prevailing mood has more to do
with midnight than the charm of twilight. Moment #2, leisurely and
introspective, has an anguished outcry in the reprise of the B section, while
the overall ferocity of Moment #5 does not abate until the very end. Moment #4
is harmonically subtle and dancelike. Moment #3, often played as an encore, has
a lot in common with Schubert’s “Hungarian Melody.” A winsome collection,
these “Musical Moments”!
Atlanta
Audio Society, March 2007
*
* *
Of all
the major European composers in the classic and romantic tradition, none has
been viewed through glasses more rose-tinted than Franz Schubert. Schubert! That
sweet, innocent creature out of the operetta Blossom Time, with his curly hair,
school-teacherish countenance and faint smile, doomed to die young, symphonies
unfinished, prodigious talent unrecognized.
Not.
According to Elizabeth Norman McKay’s authoritative Oxford biography of 1996,
the real Schubert story is one of "alcohol abuse, manic depression,
syphilis and hypersexual activity." Even more extraordinary narratives have
been proposed by musicologists as notable as Maynard Solomon and Susan McLary
and, although some of the more outlandish accounts and interpretations of his
life and music have been challenged, there is little doubt any longer that
Schubert lived fast and died young. He never was able to keep a job and spent
most of his time with a crowd of high lifers and drop-outs of dubious
reputation. Some of them were themselves artists, but others were suspicious
characters, under surveillance by the police. One of them was arrested in
Schubert’s presence and the composer himself was actually threatened with
prosecution. For what? Were he and his friends subversives trying to undermine
the Austrian Empire? Were they freedom fighters? Terrorists? To what degree were
bohemianism and secret sexual "deviation" linked with underground
political movements in what was essentially a brutal police state? Historians
and musicologists argue about what was actually going on and how deeply Schubert
was involved. In any case, this was certainly not Blossom Time.
*
* *
Joshua
Pierce adds his interpretations of Schubert to his extraordinarily vast
collection of classical, romantic and modern pianism. Pierce is one of the most
versatile virtuosi of our time. His series of recent recordings of major works
for piano and orchestra from the great composers of the late eighteenth and
early nineteenth centuries to the complete Beethoven Concertos to the Schubert
solo keyboard masterpieces recorded here to the romantic world of Liszt and
Brahms form an extraordinary testimony to the mastery and enormous range of an
artist who is also known for his performances of twentieth century repertoire
from Gershwin to Cage and beyond. This huge range and varied repertoire –
encompassing the standard repertoire, contemporary work and rediscovered
masterpieces of the past – are unique among contemporary pianists .