JOHANNES MOSER AND MARC-ANDRÉ HAMELIN COME TOGETHER FOR A VERY PERSUASIVE FRENCH PROGRAMME

Johannes Moser (cello), Marc-André Hamelin (piano): Works by Boulanger, Debussy and Franck, Koerner Hall, Vancouver Academy of Music, April 18, 2024. 

It is noteworthy when two world-renowned artists engage in a North American tour to smaller, less high-profile, venues. For the past few months, that has been the case for cellist Johannes Moser and pianist Marc-André Hamelin, who arrived in Vancouver for a pre-lunch recital of Debussy, Franck and Nadia Boulanger, courtesy of the city’s Music-in-the-Morning organization. Immediately apparent at this concert was how well these musicians play together, and just how much they enjoy playing with each other. In general, they offered bolder performances than one typically finds within the French tradition, but also thoughtful ones, and stylistic concerns did not impede enjoyment. The structural cogency brought to the modernist Debussy Cello Sonata was rewarding, and there were genuine revelations in the sonata of César Franck, differentiating its cello version from its popular violin rendering more distinctly.

It would be difficult to find more intriguing pieces to open a cello recital than Nadia Boulanger’s Three Pieces for Cello and Piano, dating from 1914. Boulanger’s reputation as educator was unbounded but she is less frequently acknowledged for her skill as a composer. I thought these three pieces were wonderfully crafted, and nicely contrasted. Moser found the expansive Faure-like lyricism in the first, the more comfortable ‘salon’ and folk qualities of the second, and combined with Hamelin for strongest dynamic contrasts and rhapsodic energy in the third, marked ‘vite et nerveusement’. Played with such animation, the final piece was striking, and would hardly have been anticipated from this source.

The sheer quality of the playing made the performance the Debussy Cello Sonata an experience. Written as the first of a planned six sonatas for diverse instruments in 1915, this is ‘late’ Debussy: the composer’s death intervened before the project was completed. In the French performing tradition, the sonata emerges as a skittish combination of elliptical statements and strong contrasts, texturally airy, and all bound together within a certain intimacy of style. Here Moser and Hamelin were much more explicit in their articulation, emphasizing structural elements, and carrying the work forward with a sureness of purpose.

From Hamelin’s imposing statement at the beginning of the Prologue, one could feel the breadth and power of what was to follow. Moser’s cello was both ardent and sensitive, the sharp contrasts in the movement’s development faithfully executed, yet it was the distilled concentration of line achieved that made everything seem integrated. Hamelin’s splendidly exact playing – beautifully suspended on one hand and full of virtuoso energy on the other – was an anchor here. The angularity and playfulness of the jazzy Sérénade, with the pizzicato cello, were presented with estimable clarity and strength – and the right sense of whimsy. Instead of being merely restless, the finale was made to seem both experimental and passionate, moving forward with a great rhapsodic verve and consuming flow. It was a performance of strength and concentration; it was like the artists were saying ‘This is a great work’ and it can sound great even if shorn from its traditional Debussy-like and impressionistic trappings.

I have always preferred the original violin version of the Franck Sonata to its cello transcription simply because the latter does not seem to add much, if anything, to the former. The significance of Moser and Hamelin’s performance was that it gave the cello version a weight and breadth of its own, developing an extremely wide range of romantic feelings out of a warm and carefully-judged rhapsodic flow.

Moser was interesting right from the start of the Allegretto, expressing the work’s yearning feelings with unusual modesty and inwardness, and careful to avoid any excess of vibrato. Hamelin’s finely-suspended piano line built the movement’s tension gradually, allowing the opening out of cello and piano together to be a truly joyous release when it came. This was very beautiful feeling, so naturally developed and in some ways unique. The following Allegro was nicely surging and impassioned, but consistently tempered by a feeling of melancholy. In the coda, Moser’s fragile, vibrato-less utterances achieved almost a sense of wonder; indeed, it was of technical interest how the cellist achieved these almost otherworldly sounds.

Hamelin’s beautifully-set rhapsodic lines gave the slow movement an unusual grandness and breadth, never revealing its secrets too quickly but putting in place a feeling of inexorability. This allowed great space for the intimate musings of the cellist, which were special, and permitted greater weight at the movement’s climax. The gentle lyricism that both artists brought to the early parts of the finale was fetching, but the grip slowly tightened, becoming more and more urgent. Hamelin’s passionate virtuoso self was very much there at the end, bringing all the weight and frenzy of the composer’s preceding Piano Quintet to bear on the occasion. This was a gloriously-abandoned way to finish an interpretation marked elsewhere by considerable deliberation and understatement. I have never enjoyed the cello version more. 

Overall, this was a recital of great artistry and intelligence, and flowed from beginning to end. It is all the more remarkable that it took place at 10:30am in the morning, and that the artists even made room for an encore: the involving slow movement of Rachmaninoff’s Cello Sonata.

 

© Geoffrey Newman 2024

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