Brahms and Schumann
John Lill - Piano
| "one of the noblest accounts on disc"
Classic FM |
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"this CD is an attractive purchase ... a masterpiece from a composer
... by a player who knows exactly what is
needed and delights in communicating it"
Muscal Opinion |
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"one of the greatest pianists alive
today...Unsurpassed playing. An intellectual giant and master craftsman. Beyond words"
The Glasgow Herald |
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"A recording truly worthy of celebration"
International Piano |
The Glasgow Herald
He is one of the greatest pianist alive today. Across the board, I do
not know another pianist who could hold a candle to this magisterial
keyboard player. Unsurpassed playing. An intellectual giant and master
craftsman. Beyond Words.
Michael Tumelty
International Piano
Lill allows the music to emerge gloriously free of
extra-musical association with intellectual clarity to have one listening
to those glorious works afresh. A recording truly worthy of celebration.
Simon Hodges
Classic FM, May 2006 ****
EMI's disc of Lill's Schumann Fantasie was released a couple of years
ago, quirkily issued simultaneously on LP. This is an earlier (2000)
recording of the same work receiving its first release. It is preferable
in every way - sound, conception and performance - one of the noblest
accounts on disc, despite some over stressed passages in the last
movement. After Brahm's three autumnal Intermezzi, Lill launches into
Brahm's mighty Handel Variations. He again he is on top form, with playing
of compelling conviction topped off with a magnificent final fugue.
Jeremy Nicolas
Musical Opinion, May/ June 2006
I can think of at least two reasons why this CD is and attractive
purchase. John Lill is one of the world's finest interpreters of both
Schumann and Brahms.
He opens Schumann's evergreen Fantasie with magisterial power before
recreating this far from simple musical edifice as though there were no
problems to its projection. Here is one of those rare accounts of a
masterpiece from a composer who knows exactly what he wants and almost
manages to put it down, by a player who knows exactly what is needed and
delights in communicating it.
The three Opus 117 Intermezzi are delightfully serious while the great
series of 25 Variations, culminating in a Fugue which would have greatly
pleased Handel himself, remains one of the greatest keyboard works in the
repertory.
I really hope that this release is soon to be followed by more from
John Lill, surely among the giants of English musicians
Denby Richards
International Record Review, May 2006
Rather oddly, John Lill is partly in competition here with himself. The
present release, on Signum, was recorded in 2000 and appears to have been
intended for a label that did not survive long enough to issue it. This
is; I think, its first appearance. But then, in December 2003, Tony
Faulkner's Green Room Productions recorded this pianist in one of the
works again, the Schumann Fantasie in C. It was licensed to Classics for
Pleasure and issued in 2004. (There, the couplings are two more Schumann
works.) Differences between the two performaces of this Everest among
piano works are minimal, but I have to say I marginally prefer the piano
sound on the Signum disc: the CfP version, amde in London's Henry Wood
Hall, where the acoustic comes across as vibrantly alove and seems in
particular to encourage Lill to open up where appropriate in the grand
manner. The great climaxes in the Schumann ring out magnificently - yet
not for a moment are the terrifying details and difficulties of (say) the
headlong second-movement Scherzo masked; nor is there any shortage of
poetry in the final pages of the first movement, complete with its most
poignant Beethoven quotation, or in the wondrous C major of the end.
Lill's control here, intellectual, emotional, technical, is complete.
A change of composer brings a reflective interlude, almost in the shape
of Brahms's late Intermezzos, Op. 117: playing, now, of deep gravity and
sonorous reflection. absolutely not sentimentalized. And the, capping
everything, more Brahms, a towering, granite-like performance of the
Handel Variations. I puts the three listed above in the remote shade:
Emanuel Ax, in 1991, comes across as a speed merchant, Seta Tanyel as
lacking in sheer power and the classic Julius Katchen, for all his pearly
articulation and fabulous control, now sounding rather dry and tired.
Listen instead to Lill for his scrupulo9us rhythm at the start, the firmly
articulated bass line, for the sheer strength he achieves at the risoluto
in Variation 4, or the young-old ambiguity, hinting at those much later
Fantasies, he finds in Variation 9, poco sostenuto, The quiet fantasy of
Variation 12, the dark, brooding quality of its successor, then the
dynamic force of Variations 14 and 15, trills precisely articulated - all
this is marvellously and seemingly spontaneously realised, and has a huge
cumulative effect too: near the end the tension almost overflows, before
the final fugue. This is taken marginally slower than by some others, but
the overall effect is tumultuous. It might almost be the old lion himself
at the keyboard. What more can one say?
Piers Burton-Page
International Piano Magazine, July/ August 2006
When
the baritone Nelson Eddy sang a recruiting anthem in search of
'Stout-hearted Men' in the MGM Hollywood musical New Moon, he might
have had the Ilford-born British pianist John Lill (b.1944) in mind. With
a massive discography on the EMI, ASV, Pickwick, Chandlos, Conifer, Nimbus
and DG labels, Lill is nothing if not a dauntless, indefatigable
workhorse. In 2000 Lill achieved unsought-after fame when he was mugged in
London on his way home to Hampstead after playing a birthday concert for
the Queen Mother. Although Lill's hands were slashed, he recovered and
resumed his career. The present CD was recorded some seven months before
the attack, with Lill in typically energetic, expansive form. The
clear-sounding recording was made in The Old Market, Hove, an arts centre
and concert hall today which in past times served as a stable and bacon
smokery - details that surely would have amused the earthy Brahms. The
highlights of this recital are the softer, more meditative parts of the
Brahms Intermezzi and Handel Variations, rather than the many
extroverted, punchy passages. Lill gives the opening aria of the Handel
Variations a tender and relaxed tone, tastefully eschewing any mock-Handelian
veneer. His sober, deliberate, sometimes understated approach may be a
legacy of his early years of study with the great poet of the keyboard,
William Kempff.
Sometimes sounding more like the
four-square Wilhelm Backhaus than the ethereal Kempff, Lill's version of
Schumann's Fantasy can seem heavy and dogged at times, until the final
slow movement achieves admirable seriousness. Still, Lill does not quite
achieve the cosmic transcendence of pianists such as Richard Goode, Murray
Perahia and András Schiff in this repertory today. Collectors will note
that Lill re-recorded Schumann's Fantasy in 2003 as part of an
all-Schumann program (Classics for Pleasure CFP 5858992). There is enough
searching, stout-hearted Brahms in the present release to make both CDs
essential listening for Lill's many fans.
Benjamin Ivry
Musical Opinion, May/ June 2006
I
can think of two reasons why this CD is an attractive purchase. John Lill
is one of the world's finest interpreters of both Schumann and Brahms. He
opens Schumann's ever-green Fantasie with magisterial power before
recreating this simple musical edifice as though there were no problems in
its projection. Here is one of those rare accounts of a masterpiece from a
composer who knows exactly what he wants and almost manages to put it
down, by a player who knows exactly what is needed and delights in
communicating it.
The three Opus 117 Intermezzi delightfully serious while the great series of 25 Variations,
culminating in a Fugue which would have greatly pleased Handel
himself, remains one of the greatest keyboard works in the repertory. I
really hope this release is soon to be followed by more from John Lill,
surely among the giants of English musicians.
Denby Richards
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