
An evening of great music at the National Liberal Club .


Three great works by Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, all in the minor key, which had a great significance as Cristian Sandrin was to show us with humility, simplicity and mastery
It was a concert ,all too rare these days, where the performer thought more of the composer than himself.

Arrau springs to mind where three great statements were enough and there was no need for more. A sumptuous feast of music relished by a full hall with an audience who follow their young hero knowing that he can be trusted .
Andras Schiff announces his programmes on the day, as his audience know that he can be trusted to illuminate a repertoire mainly of Viennese classics leaving other repertoire choices to his colleagues.



They both know that a lifetime is not enough to delve into the genius of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven or Schubert.


They say that simplicity is next to godliness and it was just this simplicity that Cristian brought to the sonata in A minor K 310, written when Mozart had heard of his mother’s death. One of only two in minor keys, the other being in C minor K 457, a key that Beethoven and also Schubert used as an attention call for something of imperious authority.
Cristian brought a rather brisk tempo to the ‘ Allegro Maestoso’ which allowed the music to unwind with a natural fluidity . Cristian’s crystalline agility could allow for an undulation of sounds ,not of porcelain, but of notes imbued with subtle meaning, as Mozart’s intricate weaving had a story to tell. Beautifully shaped, where even the daringly clashing harmonies of the development were played with whispered insistence of burning intensity. A sound world of purity and of subdued brilliance where the meaning behind the outward glitter was of revelatory insistence. A contrast in dynamics that was never exaggerated but played with intense conviction that gave an overall architectural shape of great significance and was where the presence of Mozart’s mother was always palpable.
A beautifully shaped ‘Andante cantabile’ with simplicity and delicate phrasing, the ornaments played with a crystalline clarity full of expressive meaning. A sense of touch between legato and a tip toed non legato was of quite ravishing refined beauty. The intense ‘sturm und drang’ of the central episode with its declarative phrases that were replied to with beseeching simplicity. A bass melodic line with a heart beating intensely above but all this dissolved in two bars that Cristian played with subtle knowing style as the ‘Andante’ returned with ever more disarmingly chiselled simplicity.The ‘Presto’ was a whirlwind of whispered sounds – could it be the wind over the grave- the simple entry of the bass on this ocean of intense emotion brought a moment of terror into our lives. All short lived as like Schubert the cloud lifted and we were transported into the heavenly sounds of the major key that Cristian played without any undue underlining but allowed the music to speak for itself and was where the Genius of Mozart had written with pain in his heart. Schnabel’s famous saying of Mozart being too difficult for adults but too easy for children was exemplified here as Cristian had found simplicity and innocent purity but with the intelligence and wisdom of a searching musician.


A beautifully mysterious opening to the ‘Tempest’ Sonata where Beethoven’s very precise pedal markings showed the innovative genius of a student of Papà Haydn. Beethoven had inherited the form from his mentor and had continued the evolution not only of adding much more expression, as exemplified by the slow movements of his early sonatas op 3 n.2, op 7 and op 10 n. 3, but also experimenting with sounds that could be produced by the pedal that was to revolutionise the keyboard instruments of the day. This opening pedal created a magical effect as it was to do later in this movement in the recitativi that interrupt the recapitulation. Cristian’s scrupulous attention to the composer’s indications created an effect of echoing reverberations that truly sent a chill down the spine. These moments were contrasted by the absolute clarity in the first bars of duplets played with scrupulous precision as were the menacing chords after the two recitativi. It was these contrasts and driving energy that created a tension of continual surprise. The coda a simple rumble to the final two chords as the ‘Adagio’ entered, as indeed the first movement had started, with a flowering chord. This time though there was a poignant outpouring of ominous opulence with a menacing rumble in the bass ever present . Even an innocent outpouring of refreshing simplicity had the undercurrent of menace before the final drift into oblivion. The final note a simple quaver that in Cristian’s hands has never seemed so poignant an ending to such a harrowing tale. There was a driving insistence to the flowing ‘Allegretto’ that Cristian at times allowed to burst into flames of burning intensity. But it was the gentle flowering of this movement that like the last movement of Chopin B minor Sonata has the hypnotic effect of genial mastery. Whereas Chopin closes in a blaze of glory Beethoven chooses to disappear more discretely into the whispered depths of the piano from where his ‘Tempest’ had been born.


Schubert’s late A minor Sonata was full of the same mystery and majesty entwined within an ominous pulsating energy. Bathed in pedal with glowing fluidity as the opening gives way to a build up of intensity. The melodic line whispered in the bass with Schubert’s deep breathing above but dissolving into a whispered echo of the opening motif. Building in intensity as the melody is echoed and almost hounded between the hands before arriving at the devilish pulsating now openly manifested as it burst into a final desperate plea. An ‘Andante’ with its whispered, tentative and gentle insinuations leading to an outpouring of meandering beauty bursting into life with beguiling simplicity. A haunting ending bathed in pedal with ethereal horn calls overheard with whispered insistence , and the intuitive mastery of Cristian who dared to play the whole of this coda in a haze of poetic radiance and beauty. A heart rending ending was of pure magic. Out of which burst the ‘Scherzo’ with Beethovenian insistence relieved by its ‘Trio’ of simplistic ländler beauty. The final Rondo was a florid outpouring with its contrasting episodes that Cristian played with meticulous precision and a chameleonic range of sounds . A coda of great exhilaration and excitement brought this extraordinary work to an timely close.



No amount of persuasion from Ben Westlake, his co artistic director of Kettner Concerts, could persuade Cristian to add a single note to the three remarkable performances that he had just offered. Like Arrau, Cristian is at the service of the composer of whom he is but a humble servant.

Je sense, je joue, je trasmets Q.E.D.
Cristian moves on now to the last stop of his tour where accompanied by the indefatigable Mary Orr, on Saturday he will knock on Beethoven’s door in Bonn.




















































































































