A decade ago, Daniel Barenboim performed all the Beethoven piano sonatas in London across a period of barely three weeks. Now in his mid 70s, he’s opted for a far more leisurely approach to the cycle in Berlin. This concert (a repeat of the cycle’s opening performance a couple of days earlier) kicked off a project that is set to run across two seasons, reaching its conclusion in the Beethoven Year of 2020.
The fact that it’s taking place in the Pierre Boulez Saal necessarily means that it’s also a far more intimate affair. Barenboim plays his own custom-made piano at the heart of Frank Gehry’s “salle modulable”. Extra chairs spill onto the platform, while the lights are left on to allow two-way observation between pianist and audience. As so often in this venue, the instrument was turned around during the interval give a shift a perspective in the second half.
There’s also something intimate about Barenboim’s approach – at least much of the time. Kicking off with a quartet of sonatas covering most of Beethoven’s sonata-writing career, he alternated between almost authoritarian brusqueness and melting delicacy, all emphasised by the unusual colour of his piano. Its upper range is beguiling, with a particularly fortepiano-like timbre when the soft pedal is employed, as it often was. The middle and lower ranges, however, could often sound boomy and smudged.
This might, of course, have been down to the player as much as the instrument. There’s no denying that Barenboim’s fingers don’t quite have the strength and authority they once did, and there were occasions where the playing couldn’t quite keep up with interpretations that communicate a rare authority and belief in their own inevitable rightness. We heard performances that seemed to reflect not only well over half-a-century’s familiarity with this music, but everything this great musician has done on the podium in the interim as well.