Martin Jones is known for recording the complete piano works of composers, however,
Carl Czerny is one composer that it might take a pianist decades to find, let alone record, all of his works for the instrument. Jones has undertaken
Czerny's 11 sonatas in this series for Nimbus, with a few smaller pieces to fill out each volume.
Czerny categorized his hundreds of piano pieces into serious works, brilliant pieces for concerts, easy pieces for students, and exercises. It is the latter for which he is remembered today, particularly the School of Velocity, Op. 299. This series should change that view and show that
Czerny was not only a personal link between
Beethoven (his teacher) and
Liszt (his student), but also a compositional and stylistic link between the two. Jones starts squarely in the middle of the 11 with four "sonatas" that are hardly traditional in terms of their form. Nos. 8 and 9 were published as "Grandes Fantasies en forme de Sonate," and while their heroic sound is suggestive of
Beethoven's music, it also brings to mind
Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy. The Sonata No. 5, Op. 76, does not even have a single movement in the sonata-allegro form. These are at once expansions on
Beethoven's four-movement form and a foreshadowing of
Liszt's own break with traditional: his single-movement, multi-sectioned B minor Sonata.
Liszt's virtuosity is also evoked in the flashier and more dramatic moments of
Czerny's Allegros and Prestos. It makes you wonder just what more
Czerny put into his "brilliant" pieces for concerts if these are some of his "serious" works. These sonatas also demonstrate that
Czerny was well educated in music history and theory. The fugue finale of Sonata No. 9 and the chorale variations in Sonata No. 6 refer to forms of the Baroque. The scherzo of No. 8 is like a
Rossini tidbit, and that of Sonata No. 5 is like a
Schubert dance. The Nocturne, Op. 647, that fills out disc 1, is dated much later than the sonatas, but its somewhat dense texture relates it more to the sonatas than to a
Chopin nocturne even though it's obviously
Czerny's attempt at something more lyrical and gracefully ornamented. With this first volume, Jones easily presents
Czerny as much more well-rounded and important composer than anyone who's struggled with his etudes might ever suspect.