Klaviersonate Nr. 15 op. 28 „Pastorale“
Sechs Variationen über ein eigenes Thema op. 34
Eroica-Variationen op. 35
Michael Korstick, Klavier
With vol. 6., Michael Korstick‘s highly appraised
Beethoven cycle, which is largely structured chronologically,
enters a stage where Beethoven gave rise to
the precognition of later developments of his works to
come. Sonata 28 veers away from the classical character
couple of main and secondary theme in favor of a
consistent motif development.
Op. 34, which Beethoven himself – together with
op. 35 – described as “novel“, takes the variation form
to a new stage of development: Each variation has a
key of its own and embodies a distinct musical stature.
Op. 35 eventually reaches to the stars and fathoms
extreme forms of compositional style. The splendid
final fugue already points to the Hammerklavier
Sonata op. 106.
German, European, global?
A journalist recently succeeded in
silencing his interviewee Michael Korstick
for a thoughtful moment by asking
the question “Are you a German pianist?”
with ominous emphasis on the penultimate
word. After all, this was not a question
which could simply be answered by
glancing at the pianist’s passport, but was
rather attempting to determine his artistic
position. And if we follow the phases of
Korstick’s career and his musical preferences,
it quickly becomes clear that this
question can indeed not be answered in
just one sentence.
The nine-year-old began piano lessons
in his neighbourhood in Cologne completely
free of expectations; the surprise
was therefore great when Korstick came
away from the local “Jugend musiziert”
competition with a first prize two years
later. As regards his early years at the
piano, Korstick says that the lessons were
seriously deficient particularly in the area
of technique, but that it turned out to be a
tremendous advantage that he first had to
play every newly assigned piece at sight
during lessons, as this helped him develop
an exceptionally quick grasp of new pieces
and enabled him to learn extremely fast. At
fifteen, he had therefore already learnt all
of Bach’s suites, fifteen sonatas by Haydn,
as well as all the Mozart sonatas and his
first Beethoven sonatas.
On deciding to take up the piano seriously,
he changed to his first professional
teacher Jürgen Troester, whose own
teacher Conrad Hansen had been a representative
of the great German piano tradition.
Troester first put Korstick’s technique
on a solid foundation and then began to
expand his pupil’s horizon with Brahms,
Schumann, Debussy and Ravel, whereby
it soon turned out that Korstick already
had his own highly individual artistic ideas
which during lessons he regularly had to
justify to his teacher.
Entirely new roads were then opened
up through the time he spent with the
Russian master pianist Tatiana Nikolaieva,
starting with masterclasses and then developing
into an association lasting many
years. Korstick was particularly impressed
by her – romantic – interpretations of
Bach, and he found her visual thinking a
“great enrichment” for music of the 19th
and 20th century, while his view of the
Viennese classics remained almost entirely
unchanged.
For two years, Korstick studied under
Hans Leygraf in Hanover, who focused
on the production and conscious deployment
of tonal colours. This was described
by Korstick as “tremendously instructive”
and “a godsend”, as in Leygraf he had a
teacher who was ready to support and
assist in the realisation of interpretational
decisions which deviated from his own
concepts as long as these were wellfounded
and logical.
In 1976, Korstick finally went to the
USA for seven years, where he studied at
the Juilliard School under Sascha Gorodnitzki,
who had been favorite pupil and
assistant of the legendary Josef Lhévinne
and embodied the Russian-American tradition
of Romantic piano-playing. During
his early years in the USA, Korstick spent
the summer months at the Aspen Music
School, where he worked on the fine points
of his technique with Jeaneane Dowis.
During this time, Korstick acquired the “big
tone” and other means of the “Romantic
style”; at the same time, he distanced
himself to some extent from the polished
surface and smoothness which constitute
the ideal of this school, and remained true
to his European ideals particularly when it
came to Beethoven.
It is therefore not surprising that Korstick
did not want to answer with a simple
yes or no to the crunch question mentioned
at the beginning, and described himself as
a “mishmash” who had “drunk at many
wells”.
Rather than subjecting oneself to the
thinking of a particular school or faction,
Korstick feels it is important to be capable
– while possessing an unmistakable
individuality – of deploying the widest possible
range of instrumental possibilities in
order to be able to meet various stylistic
requirements with the appropriate means.
After all, one of history’s great pianists had
already demonstrated this, and so Korstick
concluded: “If you were to insist on branding
Walter Gieseking as a ‘German’pianist, I
could live with such a label at least without
biting my pillow every night…”
Variations on Beethoven
All three works on this CD have one thing
in common: each of them in its way
points far ahead to future developments
in the output of Ludwig van Beethoven.
With the Sonata op. 28 composed in 1801,
Beethoven returns to the classical fourmovement
form after the two Sonatas op.
27 titled Quasi una fantasia, but already the
opening, which in fact contains the nucleus
of the violin concerto, makes it clear how far
the composer has moved from his roots and
is pushing open the door to a new century.
However, this should not lead to hasty
conclusions, e.g. that Beethoven’s intention
was to compose a “pastoral” work in
anticipation of Schubert. Such ideas are
belied by the numerous spiky sforzati and
irritable gestures with which Beethoven
– if they are not smoothened over by the
performer – creates an atmosphere which
has precious little to do with Biedermeierstyle
cosiness. The novelty lies rather in the
fact that the composer creates a continual
flow and eliminates the classical contrast
between main and secondary theme in
favour of the principle of continuous motivic
development. In the second movement, we
find the method of placing a sustained
legato melody in the right hand over a
pizzicato-like accompaniment in the left
which had already been tried in the Largo
of the Sonata op. 7; however, the effect is
much more ascetic here. The middle section
anticipates an idea from the second
movement of the 2nd Symphony almost note
for note. The third movement is clearly more
economically structured than the scherzi
which preceded it, and the fourth links to
the long pedal points of the first movement.
We may assume it was these elements,
foreshadowing the 6th Symphony, which
after Beethoven’s death earned this sonata
the sobriquet “Pastoral”, which did not
help make the work really popular but
which at least is not totally far-fetched.
The significance of variation form in
Beethoven’s oeuvre is frequently reduced
in public perception to astonished admiration
of such a giant work as the Diabelli
Variations op. 120; however, for a composer
who had an almost unparalleled ability to
perfect themes by continuous polishing
and to use them to maximum effect within
a given structure, this form was actually
a unique opportunity to open up new
possibilities of expression within a fixed
framework. It is therefore no coincidence
that the first surviving and printed work
by Beethoven is a set of variations (on a
march by Dressler, 1782) composed in Bonn
when he was just twelve years old.
When Beethoven published his op. 34
and 35 in 1803 after 18 piano sonatas, he
had already composed 13 sets of variations
for the piano in which he had tried
out innovative piano techniques, but had
hardly gone beyond ornamental changes
to the themes, mostly popular melodies, as
Mozart had done. A letter which he wrote
to his publisher in October 1802 is therefore
revealing: “As these v(ariations) are clearly
different from my earlier ones, rather than
labelling them with just a number like the
previous ones (for example no. 1, 2, 3 etc.),
I have included them among the actual
number of my larger musical works, as the
themes were also composed by me.”
No-one could have described the
significance of the works better than
Beethoven himself: “Both have been
worked out in a wholly new fashion, each
of them different, […] Normally I only hear
it said by others when I have new ideas, as
I am never aware of it myself, but this time
I must assure you myself that the nature of
both works is entirely new for me.”
Opus 34 begins with a 22-bar theme in
F major written in three-part form, which
is a full-scale character piece in itself.
This is followed by six variations, each
written – and this is truly revolutionary – in
a different key (D major – B-flat major –
G major – E-flat major – C minor – F major)
and embodying its own individual
character, such as Scherzo, Minuet and Funeral
March. The theme is repeated in its entirety
after the final variation, this time in richly
ornamented form.
Within this unheard-of concept,
Beethoven limits himself to an uncomplicated
form of pianistic writing; he largely
dispenses with virtuoso demands, and the
challenges with which he confronts the
performer are purely artistic in nature.
This is quite different from his gigantic
opus 35, a pinnacle in the literature for
piano: here Beethoven uses variation form
as a field of experimentation, to penetrate
new dimensions both of expression and of
pianistic vocabulary. On closer investigation,
we find that this work actually already
contains all of the elements of Beethoven’s
late style, which are being “tested” for
their possibilities of use. The fifth variation,
for example, contains the nucleus of the
fifth variation in the final movement of the
Sonata op. 109; the end of the fifteenth variation
(from 7’50”) contains the idea for the
end of the second Arioso section in op. 110,
and even the famous passage in the Arietta
variations of op. 111 so vividly described
by Thomas Mann in his “Doktor Faustus”,
where treble and bass are separated by a
gaping five and a half octaves, is foreshadowed
at 4’55” and 6’10” of this fifteenth
variation. Moreover, the outrageously difficult
fugue already contains almost the
entire pianistic vocabulary of the notorious
final fugue in the Hammerklavier Sonata
op. 106. Further examples could be found
in this gigantic work, one of Beethoven’s
greatest compositions which is second to
none in terms of musical expression and
overwhelming force.
The title Eroica Variations, under which
the work is known because Beethoven
later used the theme in the fourth movement
of his 3rd Symphony, is thus a highly
appropriate character description; however,
it might be even more appropriate,
also in the philosophical sense, to refer to
the work as “Prometheus Variations” after
the actual origin of the theme from the ballet
composed in 1800/1.
Sascha Selke
translation: ar-pege translations