Despite an abundance of virtuosic Liszt pieces and such force in the Appassionata that he almost fell off his chair at the end, what was most impressive about Behzod Abduraimov in the Queen Elizabeth Hall on Tuesday was the way he handled the softer parts. While his impulsive, coruscating virtuoso playing was that of a brilliant young pianist enjoying himself, the simple, direct tone he brought to the Schubert sonata (and the occasional moment elsewhere) was simply that of a gifted musician.
As well as his amazing level of skill, 22-year-old Uzbek pianist Behzod Abduraimov has a schoolboyish, eager air which meant the QEH audience were putty in his hands from the start. Schubert’s “Little” Sonata in A major D.664 opened the concert, and it suited him wonderfully – it’s a calm, carefree piece, written when Schubert himself was 22, while on holiday in the countryside. Abduraimov’s capacity for softness, as well as the playful way he drew contrasts between sections, made for model early Schubert playing. The final movement showed him at his very best, working up a clear sense of drive and playing with startling rhythmic insistence. But it’s a light piece, and when you know the Appassionata is around the corner, there’s only so far it can go.
Putting Schubert at his most serene next to Beethoven in full-on heady drama mode is, it has to be said, not particularly original programming, and does little to combat the hackneyed stereotypes we hold of these two contemporaries and their relationship to each other. The fact that these two particular sonatas start with the same three-note rhythm is a coincidence which only reinforces the insurmountable differences between them. And as Abduraimov’s Schubert playing was by and large more accomplished than his Beethoven, the sense of progression implied by the ordering of these two works wasn’t too effective here. But that said, this was still a Beethoven performance which had more than a few remarkable moments, particularly as the intensity ratcheted up in the outer movements. Over short sections, Abduraimov can conjure up an unbelievable sense of propulsion in this music, with a groove to it that made me want to join in thwacking my foot down to the beat (I felt a little sorry for the sustain pedal). Over longer stretches, the same momentum didn’t quite materialise, and there was nowhere really left to go after such a big start to the finale.