The Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4 Explained

The Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4
Type:studio
Artist:Glenn Gould
Cover:File:The Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4 - Gould.jpg
Alt:an album cover with a light tan background and faint illustrations of a bird flying leftward and the composer Mozart
Released:September 28, 1973
Recorded:1965, 1967, 1970, 1972, 1973[1]
Studio:Columbia 30th St. Studio, New York; Eaton Auditorium, Toronto
Genre:Classical
Length:47:39
Label:Columbia Masterworks
Producer:Andrew Kazdin

The Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4 is a 1973 album by the Canadian classical pianist Glenn Gould. It was Gould's fourth album of five dedicated to Mozart's piano sonatas. It includes the Sonata No. 11 In A Major, K. 331; Sonata No. 16 In C Major, K. 545; Fantasia No. 3 in D Minor, K. 397; and Sonata No. 15 in F Major, K. 533/K. 494.

Conception

The album was compiled from recording sessions made on seven occasions between 1965 and 1973 at New York City's Columbia 30th Street Studio and Toronto's Eaton Auditorium.[1] Columbia Records allowed Gould to record more often in his home city of Toronto due to the amount of travel involved in recording in New York; some twenty trips a year had been made.

Gould was known for using a great deal of interpretative freedom in playing. He frequently deviated from the scores on tempo and dynamics. This tendency was stronger with compositions he disliked; thus, his recordings of Mozart, whom he joked "died too late", feature his most notable departures from the score. In particular, his performance of the first movement of Sonata 11, K. 331, is considered by the music historian Kevin Bazzana to be one of his most "extreme" interpretations.[2] The first movement consists of a theme and variations, beginning andante grazioso, yet Gould plays the theme "so maddenly slow that [he] had to get everyone's hackles aroused", as he told interviewer Humphrey Burton. He believed that each variation should increase in speed, contrary to Mozart's indications; thus the fifth variation, an adagio, is played allegro.

Gould justified these decisions based on the sonata's unusual form. In an interview with Bruno Monsaingeon he said "since the first movement is a nocturne-cum-minuet rather than a slow movement, and since the package is rounded off by that curious bit of seraglio-like exotica [he meant the famous concluding ''Rondo alla turca''], one is dealing with an unusual structure, and virtually all of the sonata-allegro conventions can be set aside."[3] Bazzana notes that Rachmaninoff also played the fifth variation non-adagio in his 1919 recording.[4] Gould went on:

Reception

The official Glenn Gould website claims that no other of Gould's recordings received "a more solid thrashing than his reading of the A-major Sonata, K. 331".[5]

Critic Peter G. Davis, reviewing a number of Gould albums for The New York Times, wrote: "the loudest anathemas will undoubtedly be reserved for the Mozart record, the fourth in an ongoing project.... One critic even went so far as to brand the previous disk in this series as 'the most loathsome record ever made.' The performances of Sonatas K. 331, K. 533, K. 545 and the D Minor Fantasy here will not make this sensitive soul any happier. They don’t make me very happy either. It is very difficult to see what Gould is out to prove, unless the rumor that he actually hates this music is true. Tempos are painfully slow, the clipped, détaché articulation violates phrase structure (and many of Mozart’s specific markings).... It all conjures up an image of a tremendously precocious but very nasty little boy trying to put one over on his piano teacher."

References

See also

Notes and References

  1. The Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4 . 2015 . Sony Music Entertainment.
  2. Book: Bazzana, Kevin . Glenn Gould: The Performer in the Work: A Study in Performance Practice . 1997 . Clarendon Press . 0198166567 . Oxford . 49 .
  3. Quoted in . Interpolation in quote is Friedrich's.
  4. Book: Bazzana, Kevin . Wondrous Strange: The Life and Art of Glenn Gould . McClelland & Stewart . Toronto . 2003 . 978-0-7710-1101-6 . 253.
  5. Web site: Mozart Piano Sonatas, Vol. 4 – Glenn Gould . 2023-08-16 . glenngould.com.