András Schiff continued his traversal of the 32 Beethoven sonatas Sunday with a program that included two of the high points of the composer's middle period. At one end was the Sonata Op. 57, the "Appassionata" (1805), the work that surely marks the peak of the "heroic" Beethoven's piano output. At the other end was the less heroic and more vulnerable work, Sonata Op. 81a ("Les Adieux"), dating from 1810.
The three remaining sonatas on the San Francisco Symphony–presented program can be viewed as more or less charming diversions at a time when Beethoven was gearing up for big public pieces like the Fifth Symphony and the Fifth Piano Concerto, as well as the most direct expression of his heroic and deep personal sentiment: his sole opera, Fidelio.
The program, at Davies Symphony Hall, began whimsically. The Sonata Op. 54, in F major, is the last one to include a Minuet. In the eras of Mozart and Haydn, this innocuous little dance had been used to keep the audience on its toes, and even serves as a finale in many of their works. By contrast, Beethoven uses it to lighten up after a somber slow movement, as in his early Sonata Op. 10, No. 3, and then transforms the waltz of the Diabelli Variations into a minuet in a mock return to an earlier period.
To begin with a minuet in 1805, after composing the "Eroica" Symphony and the "Waldstein" Sonata, is more than a little arch, considering that it completely circumvents the Beethoven doctrine of the Sonata-Allegro first movement. Here, it becomes the butt of a joke, for it is contradicted by pounding octaves as if to say, "Enough of that sissy stuff!" Schiff reveled in these absurd juxtapositions of character and then played the perpetual-motion finale with a steady, rollicking rhythm. It was great fun and amply demonstrated one of the pianist's great strengths: his rock-solid sense of tempo.
In the mighty "Appassionata," the sense of total control was also present, but here I am not so sure that the tempestuous character of the music was well served. The swirling masses of sound were marvelous to behold, and in the eye of the storm you could always count each note in the deluge of arpeggios. I longed for more abandon — apres moi, le deluge. In a piece that teeters on the brink of disaster, surely a sense of risk is crucial to experiencing the terror and power of nature that animates this desperate and tragic work.
The solemn slow movement in the major key is like a prayer for deliverance that is interrupted at the final cadence by a questioning diminished chord, after which the final struggle begins. Schiff accomplished this with a time-stopping slowness. When all hell finally broke loose, every fiery furnace was at the precise degree of temperature, and through it all the artist remained totally composed. How it all ends is an open question. It would appear to have been in triumph, judging by the reception the audience gave to Schiff's performance. In any case, he did a masterful job on those machine-gun chords when he reached the Presto.