 Un énième surgeon repêché de la profuse tradition viennoise barocco-classico-préromantique, tendance autour de Stamitz de l'école de Mannheim (brillante, expressive, surcontrastée dans les nuances, sentimentalement déboutonnée), tel claviériste fonctionnaire le bâclerait volontiers en préposé de la poste reconverti aux travaux d'aiguilles : ça vous tricote et ça vous expédie. Mais là, on aurait tort ainsi d'enfiler l'Eberl, dont l'intérêt nous éberlue autant que la conviction du présent pianofortiste (son instrument n'étant pourtant pas de première beauté). A l'époque, notre Anton Franz Josef fut agrégé à la sainte trinité Haydn-Mozart-Beethoven, jusqu'à dérober à ce dernier la faveur du public, tandis qu'une interaction avec le second est avérée (annotations professorales de Mozart sur des manuscrits d'Eberl, dont certaines œuvres furent faussement attribuées en retour à son maître). Le sang empoisonné (septicémie), peut-être au regret lucide que le susdit trio de tête de la gloire ne fût avec lui plausiblement quarteron, il mourut dès 42 ans, ce qui laisse imaginer ce qu'il aurait pu semer d'encore plus original aux quatre vents du nouveau tourment romantique. "Bien qu'il ne fût pas grand, il était bien bâti", le croqua physiquement une gazette. On serait tenté d'en dire autant de sa musique, au risque d'en mésestimer quelque hauteur d'inspiration : plus affirmative qu'éberlificotée, emportée, assénée, presque violente, d'un dramatisme abrupt et empesé, pas vraiment le tempérament à boire du raplapla. C'est du brutal, dira le tonton flingueur mélomane. Ce charmant compositeur ayant eu réputation de ne voir chez quiconque que son vrai fond de bonté, ce rentre-dedans esthétique n'est pas sans surprendre. Mais après tout, le vent se lève de tant d'orages désirés, il faut tenter d'aimer Eberl ! Surtout la sonate op. 39, prophétiquement cyclique (écho du deuxième mouvement dans le finale). (Gilles-Daniel Percet)  A Viennese contemporary of Mozart and Beethoven, praised by Haydn and Gluck, and forerunner of Chopin and Liszt: the unique voice of Anton Eberl in new, historically informed studio recordings. Born in 1765, the same year as Mozart, Anton Eberl also displayed great musical talent from an early age. Only his father’s bankruptcy saved him from a legal career, however, and he threw himself into the world of music with such success that even during their own lifetimes pieces of Eberl appeared under Mozart’s name. The earliest of these (published at least 14 times as Mozart’s, never as Eberl’s) was a set of variations on Ignaz Umlauf’s Zu Steffen sprach im Traume, one of Mozart’s favourite teaching pieces. After Mozart’s death Eberl made concert tours with his widow Constanze and her sister Aloysia Lange, accomplished sopranos both, and became director of music at the court of the Russian royal family in St Petersburg. Having returned to Vienna, he had a Symphony in E flat performed at the same concert as the premiere of Beethoven’s ‘Eroica’ – and contemporary audiences preferred Eberl’s work! Yet his name rather died with him, in 1807, and so it has been left to modern performers such as Luca Quintavalle to revive Eberl for a new generation of listeners. He was highly regarded in his time as a composer for theatre, but most of his operas are now lost, and his largest surviving body of work is written for keyboard. These seven piano sonatas by themselves should restore his name to a senior rank of Viennese composers around the turn of the 18th century. Eberl made uncommonly ambitious use of minor-key tonalities for his time; there are two G minor sonatas of which the second, Op.39, probably counts as his masterpiece, for its fiery inspiration and breadth of expression. Luca Quintavalle’s second appearance on Brilliant Classics, after a well-received collection of harpsichord suites and sonatas by Barriere and de Bury (BC95428), reviewed by MusicWeb International: ‘This repertoire is served very well by Luca Quintavalle who delivers energetic and stylish performances… Considering the importance of the repertoire and the quality of music and interpretation this production deserves the label of Recording of the Month.’

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