Recordings
|
|
|
|
Beethoven: Complete Cello Music
CDD22004
2CDs Dyad (2 for the price of 1) — 2CDs Archive Service Only
|
|
Details
|
|
Movement 1a: Adagio sostenuto
Movement 1b: Allegro
Movement 2: Allegro vivace
|
The development section finds us suddenly in A major with obvious delight. But then things get stormy and the cello growls in the lower register. There is a wonderful bridge passage in D flat major which takes us quite by surprise, followed by a chromatic ascent and a sudden fortissimo at the return of the theme. After the recapitulation, rather as we would expect in a concerto, a pause introduces a cadenza-like passage for both instruments—probably the first joint cadenza written for cello and piano. Those upward arpeggios reappear in a brief return to the Adagio tempo. But high spirits win the day, and after some virtuoso flourishes in both instruments (marked Presto), the opening theme returns to give us a brief but brilliant coda.
Both of the Op 5 sonatas have finales that are rustic in flavour, where the good smells and fresh air of the countryside are not far away. The Rondo of the F major, marked Allegro vivace, is a merry dance in 6/8 time with some nice imitation at the beginning. It is far from well-behaved, however. The middle section is a country dance in B flat minor after which the action almost stops while the cello drones away on an open fifth, and the piano has those rising arpeggios again. The second time this happens we are led directly to the coda, which, like the whole movement, demands virtuoso playing from both participants, except for a brief reminiscence of quieter moments shortly before the end.
from notes by Angela Hewitt & Daniel Müller-Schott © 2008