With his Piano Concerto No. 4 in G, the centerpiece in the concert with the London Symphony Orchestra on Sunday, Beethoven took the classical concerto format he had inherited into uncharted waters. The work opens with a series of piano chords, which the orchestra takes up, develops and kneads into riveting thematic material before the soloist returns. In addition to this role reversal between soloist and orchestra, the work also explores new dimensions in their relationship.
Mitsuko Uchida put all she had into the performance, savouring every phrase and taking special care to get the opening chords right. If there was any doubt about the strain of her effort, her grimacing throughout would cast it aside. Her treatment of the material was sensitive and insightful. I could ask of Ms. Uchida more wit, but that would be churlish after all she’s done.
While the work provided plenty of space for Ms. Uchida and the LSO under Sir Colin Davis to engage in banter and discourse, their near-perfect coordination, as in lockstep marching, re-defined rapport. It was as if they were old friends or a long-married couple, with each finishing the other’s sentences or signalling the next move with a mere glance at each other.
The second movement was particularly magical. Beethoven biographer Adolf Bernhard Marx and Franz Liszt both suggested that this movement depicted Orpheus taming the Furies at the gates of Hades. In Ms. Uchida’s hands, the piano sounded more like it was placating a rather grumpy orchestra, slowly comforting it to tranquility. The strings began with long, plaintive statements of some gravity, like a husband coming home after a rough day in the office. The piano, the pliant wife, meekly responded with short and hushed phrases which became longer and bolder, as the orchestra retreated into shorter and shorter passages.
Without a break, soloist and orchestra launched into the jolly final movement, hand in hand scaling new heights in extensive development of the material, supported by trumpets and drums. Would it be an over-simplification to liken this concerto to the process of courting – first the tentative and gentle moves, then some emotional tussle, and finally celebration in union?
Earlier in the evening, Sir Colin and the LSO had opened the concert with Haydn’s Symphony no. 98 in B flat major. At 84, Sir Colin conducted from a high chair, but there was no lack of energy on his part, although with LSO he would have hardly needed to exert himself.