Is it time to give Beethoven a rest? Piano prodigy Igor Levit built his early career on Beethoven, making an audacious recording debut at the age of 25 with a double-disc set of the composer’s last five piano sonatas. In 2019, Levit added the first 27 for a complete boxed set of sonatas. He has taken them around the world, winning plaudits from Carnegie Hall to Hamburg’s Elbphilharmonie. For his inaugural appearance in Prague, at this year’s Firkušný Festival, he played the final three (30–32, Opp.109-111) straight through, stopping only between 31 and 32 to take a quick bow.
Given Levit’s penchant for lengthy performances – during the pandemic lockdown, he live-streamed a performance of Erik Satie’s 20-hour Vexations, pausing only for food and bathroom breaks – the format was no surprise. Nor was the intensity and technical brilliance that Levit brought to the stage. But the impression he left was that of an artist who has said everything he has to say about a certain repertoire, and is now mostly going through the motions.
There is no question about Levit’s absolute mastery of the sonatas. His depth of understanding is clear in his authoritative voice, his skill dazzling in virtuoso runs up and down the keyboard, and his interpretation almost kaleidoscopic in its invention and variety. Like someone turning on a faucet, he can instantly become lyrical, contemplative, playful – whatever mood strikes him, with consummate clarity and fluency.
And mood is in many ways what Levit’s performances are about. He regards the notes on the page as a starting point, playing with the same elasticity that characterizes his style, arms and hands sailing off the keyboard like birds taking flight. Of course, every serious artist is entitled to his own treatment of the music. But at least in this performance, Levit constricted rather than illuminated it.