Piano Concertos 1-5 (Comp)
On this CD:
1. Piano Concerto No. 1 in D major, H. 149
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
2. Piano Concerto No. 2, H. 237
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
3. Concertino for piano & orchestra, H. 269
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
4. Piano Concerto No. 3, H. 316
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
5. Piano Concerto No. 4 ("Incantations"), H. 358
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
6. Piano Concerto No. 5 ("Fantasia concertante"), H. 366
Composed by Bohuslav Martinu
Performed by Czech Philharmonic Orchestra
with Emil Leichner
Conducted by Jiri Belohlavek
Piano Concertos 1-5 (Comp), Music, Martinu, Emil Leichner, Belohlavek Czech Phil, Classical, Classical Composers
Average customer rating:
- Great Performance
- Great Analog Beethoven Cycle
- An essential collection
- The best value in classical music on CD at the moment...
- Wonderful Performances
|
Beethoven: The Complete Symphonies and Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Beethoven - The Complete String Quartets / Alban Berg Quartet
- Mozart:The Complete Piano Sonatas and Variations
- Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas / Daniel Barenboim
- Dvorák: The Symphonies
- Furtwangler Conducts Beethoven - Beethoven: symphonies no 3,4,5, & 9, Leonore
ASIN: B00004YA0S
Release Date: 2000-11-07 |
Tracks:
- I: Adagio Molto - Allegro Con Brio
- II: Andante Cantabile Con Moto
- III: Menuetto & Trio: Allegro Molto E Vivace
- IV: Adagio - Allegro Molto E Vivace
- I: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- II: Andante Molto Mosso
- III: Allegro - In Tempo D'allegro - Tempo I
- IV: Allegro
- V: Allegretto
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Con Brio
- II: Marcia Funebre: Adagio Assai
- III: Scherzo & Trio: Allegro Vivace
- IV: Finale: Allegro Molto - Poco Andante - Presto
- Gross Fuge
Tracks:
- I: Adagio Molto - Allegro Con Brio
- II: Larghetto
- III: Scherzo & Trio: Allegro
- IV: Allegro Molto
- I: Allegro Con Brio
- II: Andante Con Moto - Piu Mosso - Tempo I
- III: Allegro -
- IV: Allegro - Presto
Tracks:
- I: Adagio - Allegro Vivace
- II: Adagio
- III: Menuetto: Allegro Vivace - Trio: Un Poco Meno Allegro
- IV: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- I: Poco Sostenuto - Vivace
- II: Allegretto
- III: Presto - Assai Meno Presto
- IV: Allegro Con Brio
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Vivace Con Brio
- II: Allegretto Scherzando
- III: Tempo Di Menuetto
- IV: Allegro Vivace
- Overture
- Overture
- Overture
- Overture
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Non Troppo, Un Poco Maestoso - Christa Ludwig
- II: Molto Vivace - Presto - Christa Ludwig
- III: Adagio Molto E Cantabile - Andante Moderato - Christa Ludwig
- IV: Presto - Recitativo - Allegro Assai - Alla Marcia - Christa Ludwig
- Overture - Christa Ludwig
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Con Brio
- II: Largo
- III: Rondo: Allegro Scherzando
- I: Allegro Con Brio
- II: Adagio
- III: Rondo: Molto Allegro
Tracks:
- I: Allegro Con Brio
- II: Largo
- III: Rondo: Allegro
- I: Allegro Moderato
- II: Andante Con Moto
- III: Rondo: Vivace
Tracks:
- Fantasia For Piano, Chorus And Orchestra
- I: Allegro
- II: Adagio Un Poco Mosso -
- III: Rondo: Allegro
Amazon.com essential recording
Otto Klemperer's Beethoven is one of the towering achievements in the history of recordings. By today's standards, these performances are hopelessly old-fashioned: dark, heavy, and frequently very slow. But they are also the grandest, most unsentimental, most purposeful versions in the catalog. In addition, the relatively slow tempos (only in the fast movements--the slow ones are pretty swift) and forward wind balance permit more detail to be heard than in most original-instrument performances. At budget price and with the entire piano concerto cycle thrown in for good measure, this is greatness incarnate. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
Great Performance.......2007-07-07
There are many different ways to perform Beethoven and each one is valid.
If you like it fast - go to Toscanini or Norrington. If you prefer slow, powerful and majestic, this is your set. Towards the end of his distinguished career, the great Otto Klemperer set down his final views of the performance of these symphonnies. The set is a coherent whole and will give great pleasure for ever. The challenging mix of the young Barenboim and the aged Klemperer worked surprisingly well and thus the concertos may also be recommended. There are odd additional items which add to the pleasure. Finally do not forget to purchase his memorable set of 'Fidelio' to complete your traversal of a great conductor giving great performances of a composer that he loved. Finally the price is ridiculously low and provides quality and quantity at a great price. Thus you should be able to buy the opera set from the savings made!
Great Analog Beethoven Cycle.......2007-05-07
This Klemperer cycle is just one of a dozen or so GREAT analog Beethoven symphony cycles that were recorded during Analog's golden age starting about 1958. These cycles are easily a match for digital and they should still be around for another 1,000 years, if the Lord tarries. These sets include: Karajan (twice, early 60s and late 70s) Bohm, Krips, Jochum, Bruno Walter, Leinsdorf, Rene Leibowitz, Szell, Ormandy, Bernstein, Steinberg, and Solti. This morning I listened to the Klemperer recordings of Beethoven's symphonies 5, 6, & 7. Very enjoyable, I got my Beethoven RDA fix.
Of all these Analog sets, I most enjoy the Leibowitz Spring 1961 cycle with the Royal Philharmonic. I have this cycle on an audiophile early 90s European import Edition Phoenix label special pressing "on extra virgin vinyl." These are by far the best analog symphonic lps I have ever heard from a recording standpoint. BY FAR! And they will rock your house.
You can almost justify Karajan's 4 recorded Beethoven cycles and one video based upon improvements in recording technology. Thru Rhapsody, I have listened to his mid 50s cycle and the orchestra sounds great, but the recording quality is sub par compared to Analog's golden age. So the rational for 4 cycles would be, (1) recent great improvements in recording technology (early 60s), (2) it has been 15 years and he has grown as an artist (late 70s), (3) we now have digital! Let's do one of the first Beethoven digital cycles (80s).
Klemperer is a no-brainer. I do not have to think twice about plopping one of his lps onto my turntable or hitting the play button at Rhapsody. When the music starts, the listening pleasure begins. Don't miss his Bruckner symphony recordings!
An essential collection.......2007-04-25
How best to describe Otto Klemperer's perspective on Beethoven's symphonies: grand, heroic, intense, insightful, stubborn, obstinate, detailed, dramatic, monumental, granitic, deeply emotional, never sentimental. This boxed set of the complete symphonies and concerti embodies all of these elements as stands as one of the great achievements of recorded music.
These performances were recorded with the Philharmonia Orchestra at its peak, in the sumptuous acoustics of Kingsway Hall in London and in fine and detailed sound, and mostly in the mid-1950's during one of the brief charmed periods of Klemperer's life. EMI's impresario Walter Legge had made him permanent conductor of the Philharmonia, and when Klemperer embarked on this project in his 70's, he was in relatively good mental and physical health (Klemperer could show symptoms of manic depression and survived many health crises - brain tumor, broken bones, paralysis - which would have stopped most people).
By this time Klemperer had slowed the tempi of the fast movements of the Beethoven symphonies (listen to his early 1950's recordings of the 5th and 6th on Vox to hear by how much). This tendency is more pronounced in these studio recordings than in the live performances which were recorded during that era. The slowness is mostly saved by Klemperer's use of "sprung" rhythms, which keep the slow tempi from feeling laggardly.
Klemperer's earliest recordings in this series - symphonies 3, 5 and 7 - predate stereo and were recorded in excellent monaural sound. He rerecorded all three of these symphonies in stereo, but those recordings were made after he burned himself by falling asleep while smoking in bed. All three performances feature slower tempi than the earlier ones (whether this was the conductor's preference or the result of physical incapacity is open to conjecture). In particular, the rerecorded 7th suffered from lax phrasing, inattentiveness and perverse tempi. That is NOT the version contained in this set: fortunately, EMI had simultaneously recorded the earlier version of the 7th in "experimental" stereo, and it is that earlier version which is released here (and in remarkably good stereo). The versions of the 3rd and 5th are the rerecorded stereo ones.
You will find no finer studio versions of the 2nd, 4th, 6th, 7th or 8th. All are insightful, beautifully detailed and powerful. The 2nd clearly looks forward to the 3rd and not back toward Hayden, the 4th is boisterous and vital, the 6th bucolic and sumptuous (not a quality normally associated with Klemperer), the 7th gains in drama what it loses in swiftness and lightness, and in the 8th in particular we see the conductor's empathy to Beethoven's sense of humor. Klemperer had a deep affinity for the "Eroica", and the rerecorded version here, while slower than the 1955 recording, was dubbed by "High Fidelity"'s Harris Goldsmith (no Klemperer fan, he) as "the best Eroica going slow" and is a monumental masterpiece (the second movement is shattering). The 1st, while leisurely, is a lovingly crafted.
That leaves the 5th and 9th. There is no doubt in my mind that the earlier, mono 5th is superior to the remake in this set. We lose that sense of an inevitable onslaught, especially in the outer movements. And the 9th, while similar in conception to the live versions recorded around the same time (on Testament with the Philharmonia and on Music&Arts with the Concertgebouw), suffers from diffuse sound and occasional lack of focus. I emphasize that these recordings of both symphonies are still head and shoulders above most of the competition; we're talking about different levels of greatness here.
Are there superior Klemperer recordings of these symphonies? Yes; but all are live, and despite the relatively good reprocessed sound, they don't reveal the same level of detail that these studio recordings do. Klemperer was a very different conductor in front of an audience, and there is more vitality and drama in the live versions of the 3rd (Testament, with the Danish Symphony), 6th 7th and 8th (Music&Arts with the Concertgebouw) and the 9th (see above). Music&Arts' set of the complete symphonies, recorded live in Vienna in 1960, is long out of print and had cramped sound with poor detail - a supplement to this set, not a replacement.
As to the piano concerti: they are better than one might expect. Barenboim, although steeped in the Germanic performance tradition, is more naturally aligned with the Furtwangler and Edwin Fischer than with Klemperer. However, the two of them actually work together extremely well and this is a fine, insightful set.
Any complete cycle of Beethoven, symphonies or concerti, will have drawbacks. There will be unevenness in the performances, as there are here. But there are advantages to hearing one musician's perspective on the works, especially when (as here) the performer has depth of understanding, integrity of vision, and a structural understanding of the pieces.
The digital remastering is excellent and the sound barely shows its age. This may not be your only complete set of Beethoven's symphonies, but it should be one of them. And at a price this low, it's a bargain too.
The best value in classical music on CD at the moment..........2007-01-02
What is the best value in classical discs available today ? Who knows, but I defy anyone to beat the EMI compilation of Klemperer' recordings of the complete Beethoven Symphonies, Piano Concertos (with Barenboim), several overtures the Choral Fantasia etc etc. 9 discs for only $44 ( well that was the price I paid). You have got to be kidding... I only had two concerns with buying this. First on the age of the recordings, all more than 40 years old. No worry at all. This is a masterpiece of reconstruction. The sound quality indistinguishable from any modern recording. Secondly , the performances themselves. I had been warned that Klemperer notoriously chose rather slow tempi. Again I needn't have worried. I immediately went to the slow movements of the 2nd piano concerto and the fourth symphony, where many slow tempists have in the past come unstuck. The piano concerto was an absolute revelation. The combination of the youthful Barenboim and the Philharmonia's masterful playing time and gain had me on the edge of my seat. " Yes,go on, well...." Slow it may have been. Boring, never. The same applies in spades to the slow movement of the fourth. Right from the eerie opening, which is yes, very slow indeed, I knew this movement would be a revelation and I can honestly say I have never hear it better played. Follow this with a scherzo bounding in energy and thumping finale and you will never get a better performance of this, one of Beethoven's "lesser" symphonies. And I haven't even got round to the "biggies" yet! The box set looks unattractive and the portrait of Klemperer makes him appear a first class nerd. Pay absolutely no attention to this....
Wonderful Performances.......2006-04-07
I have admittedly not made it through the entire set as of yet, but feel sufficiently blown away by the First Symphony and the Eroica - particularly the second movement of the latter - to weigh in here. With respect to the tempo issue, I must - at least so far - argue in favor of Klemperer's decision to slow things down a bit. I think the effect is, as someone else has observed, a clearer and more visceral experience of Beethoven's composition. It brings out the feeling. The sound comes up a little short on the low end, but it isn't a major distraction. My only problem lies in EMI's inexplicable lack of any discussion of the performances. The notes are bland, dry descriptions of the pieces themselves, with some basic history thrown in. Given the fact that there are probably hundreds of different CDs of Beethoven's symphonies out there, all with similar explanatory notes, it is infuriating that nothing is said about these particular performances. This is in contrast with the EMI Bach set (with Yehudi Menuhin) in which there is a wonderful essay that discusses Menuhin's work in historical context.
Average customer rating:
- five sparkling gems
- Outstanding.
- OK for the money
- You'll like this set even if you don't like Saint-Saens
- Trust us
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Saint-Saëns: Piano Concertos 1-5
Manufacturer: Decca
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Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Mendelssohn: Piano Concertos
- Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos
- Saint-Saëns: Concertos
- Bruch: The Complete Violin Concertos
- Liszt: The Two Piano Concertos; The Piano Sonata
ASIN: B00000425S
Release Date: 1995-05-16 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. In D Major, Op. 17: I Andante -- Allegro assai
- Piano Concerto No. In D Major, Op. 17: II Andante sostenuto quasi adagio
- Piano Concerto No. In D Major, Op. 17: III Allegro con fuoco
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 22: I Andante sostenuto
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 22: II Allegro Scherzando
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 22: III Presto
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In E Flat Major, Op. 29: I Moderato assai - Piu mosso (Allegro maestoso)
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In E Flat Major, Op. 29: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In E Flat Major, Op. 29: III Allegro non troppo
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op. 44: I Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In C Minor, Op. 44: II Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In F Major, Op. 103: I Allegro animato
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In F Major, Op. 103: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In F Major, Op. 103: III Molto allegro
Amazon.com
There is a lot of really enjoyable music here. I remember organizing a performance of the Fifth Piano Concerto (subtitled "The Egyptian") when I was repertoire committee chairman for a local community orchestra. We found it not only very playable for all of us amateurs in the orchestra, but it simply blew the audience away. It's a real find. Both the Second and Fourth concertos have been popular favorites for more than a century, but they seemed to have vanished sight in the past couple of decades. It was our loss, but no more. And the Fifth Piano Concerto, even when played by amateurs, can blow an audience away. At two discs for the price of one, these fine performances offer listeners a great chance to know this charming and vivacious music at little or no risk at all. So why hesitate? --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
five sparkling gems.......2007-02-21
Saint-Saens was the dominant French composer of the second half of the nineteenth century. And yet his works remain under-appreciated. His party piece "Carnival of the Animals" is probably his best known composition. Of his five symphonies, only the last (the "Organ" symphony, which is given the number 3) is well known, and that as a novelty crowd pleaser, rather than in recognition of the masterpiece it is. All five symphonies should be part of the standard repertoire. Of the piano concertos, the best known is the second, with the fourth somewhere behind that. But all five are glittering, assured works, full of imagination, and amongst the most thoroughly realized concertos written. They make full use of all the colours of the large romantic orchestra, and range through the pallette of emotions from exuberance to reflective sadness. This is a fine recording, the notes dropping in clear cascades of gorgeous sound. It should be part of any classical music collection.
Outstanding........2005-11-24
Having listened to other recordings, plus hearing live ones, of Concerto #2 (the most popular) for 15 years, it was nice to hear the entire pentalogy of the Saint-Saens piano concerti.
Pascal Roge may not be as big a name as Martha Argerich or
Vladimir Ashkenazy, but he certainly knows how to play the piano.
There isn't a dull moment in any of them. Roge captures all the youthful exuberance in the musically-straightforward 1st concerto. The 5th concerto (often called "The Egyptian concerto") is definitely the best of the lot. The tonal coloring is exquisite throughout, especially in the 'Nile River' 2nd movement and the boisterous finale. I could listen to it all day. The 3rd and 4th concerti are fine; these are musically less interesting than the other three. The orchestra is equally virtuosic and never oversteps its bounds, under the guidance of Dutoit. Highly recommended.
OK for the money.......2005-04-22
All in all, I think this is a fair value. Dutoit does a great job conducting and the quality of the recording is good. I was disappointed with the soloist's interpretation of concerto no 2 - I felt too much liberty was taken - esp on the opening passages. What should have been one long phrase building in intensity was instead practically broken into shorter phrases and any momentum that might have been gained was lost. I also felt like the third movement was not played at a tempo I would consider 'presto'.
I liked concerto no 1 very much - these concertos should not be ignored even if some critics do not consider Saint Saens a 'heavyweight' composer.
You'll like this set even if you don't like Saint-Saens.......2004-05-06
Unlike some of the other reviewers here, I am one of those who consider Saint-Saens to be a hopeless musical lightweight, a first-rate second-rate composer (as the old saw goes), a musician of prodigious technical talent but lacking any real depth in his music. It isn't any accident that, despite the tremendous popularity of his music during his lifetime, only about 2 dozen (and that is probably being generous) of his many many pieces are performed with any consistency.
Not coincidentally, some of Saint-Saens' pieces that have shown staying power are at least a couple of the piano concerti, and they are impeccably presented here by Roge & Dutoit. All in all, they are pretty musical confections of a decidedly classical strain, certainly not wallowing in the late romanticism that was running rampant at the time they were composed. If you are lukewarm about Saint-Saens, this is a collection that will plead his case for you about as well as anything to be found these days. Also, it is nice and cheap --- that certainly does not detract from its desirability. Enjoy.
Trust us.......2003-03-02
Looking at the other reviews here, I can only nod in complete agreement. Saint-Saëns is an underrated composer and these 5 concertos are joyful, seductive and deserving of a lot more attention than they have received. Saint-Saëns, like Mendelssohn, had the ability to instantly inspire happiness in the listener, this listener anyhow. Yes, the 2nd and 4th occasionally do get an airing, but the "Eqyptian" (the 5th) is every bit their equal and the remaining two concertos certainly have their own merits. The five deserve a double disc outing like this.
The performances here are very, very fine indeed. I have not heard the Collard/Previn versions (which are referred to in another review), although I have several versions of the 2nd and 4th. Charles Dutoit and Pascal Roge do a wonderful job, investing these performances with the affection and conviction they deserve. True, there is more of the virtuoso than the philosopher about Roge's playing, but that is entirely appropriate to Saint-Saëns. This is feel-good music (and music-making) of the very highest callibre.
Returning to these discs is always a pleasure for me and I hope will be for you. If you have even a passing interest in late Romantic piano concertos treat yourself to these.
Average customer rating:
- beethoven piano concerti
- wished it was not a set
- Wonderful set!
- What is Ashkenazy up to?
- Beautiful, but not perfect
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Beethoven: The Piano Concertos
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Similar Items:
- Beethoven: The Violin Sonatas
- Mozart: The Piano Concertos
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- Chopin: The Piano Works
ASIN: B0000041K9
Release Date: 1997-06-24 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C Major, Op. 15: I. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C Major, Op. 15: II. Largo
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C Major, Op. 15: III. Rondo: Allegro
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: I. Andante Con Moto, Cantabile E Compiacevole
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: II. Allegro
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: III. Andante, Cantabile E Grazioso
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: IV. Presto
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: V. Quasi Allegretto
- Six Bagatelles, Op. 126: VI. Presto-Andante Amabile E Con Moto
- Fur Elise
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: I. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: II. Largo
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: III. Rondo: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, Op. 58: I. Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, Op. 58: II. Andante con moto
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, Op. 58: III. Rondo: Vivace
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In E Flat Major, Op. 73: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In E Flat Major, Op. 73: II. Adagio un poco mosso
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In E Flat Major, Op. 73: III. Rondo: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, Op. 19: I. Allegro con brio
- II. Adagio: 2. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, Op. 19: III. Rondo: Molto allegro
Amazon.com
Each of these performances has its own profile. The orchestra plays incisively in the First Concerto, but Ashkenazy's plush lyricism doesn't make a good match either with the orchestra or with the music, and he makes one weird ritard in the first movement. The Second Concerto is uneventful, rather bland and pleasant. The Third Concerto seems to be the best performance of the lot, with dramatic playing by soloist and orchestra, but it's sabotaged by blurry recorded sound, the only serious problem with sound quality in the entire set. The Fourth Concerto is enlivened, at least intellectually, by Solti's approach, constantly revealing interesting unfamiliar details in the orchestral score. Ashkenazy's detachment makes this a frosty but fascinating experience. The "Emperor" is a good routine performance, nothing special. The Bagatelles aren't much of a bonus, since they're rather dully played. (Why not the "Choral" Fantasy?) There's nothing actively bad about this set, and it's reasonably priced. But Beethoven deserves better, and gets it from many performers, including the fascinating Uchida-Sanderling collaborations. --Leslie Gerber
Customer Reviews:
beethoven piano concerti.......2007-05-07
the article was in good condition and i had a smooth and prompt delivary
wished it was not a set.......2006-10-27
All I can comment right now, is the performance of the Beethoven piano concerto 1 with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra was poor. The playing was stiff, the orchestra was below what they should be. I thought I even heard some off key notes from the band! Disappointed. Maybe I am just so used to how Martha Argerich plays it... However the rest of the discs are fantastic, what a contrast!!!!!!
Wonderful set!.......2005-05-03
Ashkenazy is more sweet in his playing than profound, Solti and the CSO are on fire, and the Decca sound is excellent! Good job!
What is Ashkenazy up to?.......2004-05-16
After purchasing Ashkenazy's complete set of the Mozart concertos, I decided to get this one of the Beethoven concertos. Although some of the reviewers had voiced complaints about this set, I felt that it couldn't be that bad. Indeed, it's not that bad, but its not that good either.
To me, it seems as if Ashkenazy has no sense of style. His approaches to these concertos are more lyrical and romantic rather than classical. Take the first, for example. Ashkenazy treats the piano line as if he were playing Chopin. Solti, on the other hand, seems to feel that louder is better. Thus we have a very bizarre dialogue between piano and orchestra in the C major concerto. The second isn't much better. Although Ashkenazy gives a much better reading, Solti again feels that the CSO must play as forcefully as possible. The concerto is rather bland in the first place and Ashkenazy's approach is nothing special. The third concerto is wonderfully played by both Ashkenazy and the CSO. Ashkenazy treatment of the piano line is more classical while Solti's boisterous approach actually works in this powerful work. However, poor recording conditions (the evident hiss in the background) ruin the largo. The G major concerto is the most interesting in the set. Solti's treatment of the orchestra accompaniment is quite inspired - this is Solti at his most tender. However, Ashkenazy's icy interpretation is detached, it seems as if he and Solti are on two entirely different pages. Although the recording is remarkable in its beauty, Ashkenazy's lack of warmth leaves a chilling cloud over the performance. The fifth is nothing special. Solti is back to being loud and Ashkenazy gives a good, routine performance.
All in all, even at a budget price, this set is not highly recommended.
Beautiful, but not perfect.......2004-02-16
This is a good set of the piano concertos. However, the main problem is in the Fifth (Emperor): the second movement is extremely slow and faltering. This is one of the most beautiful pieces ever composed and the second movement MUST be perfect, as the version of Perahia: astonishing sensible, rhythmic.
Having problems in the Fifth is almost unforgivable in a concert like this, and is the main reason to give only 3 stars instead of 5.
Average customer rating:
- A very good collection of moving compositions.
- Nothing but the Best
- Buy it for all the five concerti, just don't expect much from the second concerto
|
Saint-Saëns: Piano Concertos 1-5; Wedding Cake Caprice-Valse
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
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Similar Items:
- Saint-Saens: Introduction and Rondo capriccioso in Am; Danse macabre Op40
- Beethoven: Piano Trios, Vol. 2; Itzhak Perlman; Vladimir Ashkenazy; Lynn Harrell
- Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos; Overture on Hebrew Themes
- Beethoven: Piano Trios, Vol. 1; Itzhak Perlman; Vladimir Ashkenazy; Lynn Harrell
- Brahms: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 & 2; Haydn Variations; Tragic Overture; Academic Festival Overture
ASIN: B0002XV30Q
Release Date: 2005-02-15 |
Tracks:
- I. Andante - Allegro Assai
- II. Andante Sostenuto Quasi Adagio
- III. Allegro Con Fucco
- I. Andante Sostenuto
- II. Allegro Scherzando
- III. Presto
- I. Allegro Moderato - Andante
- II. Allegro Vivace - Andante - Allegro
Tracks:
- I. Moderato Assai - Piu Mosso (Allegro Maestoso)
- II. Andante
- III. Allegro Non Troppo
- I. Allegro Animato
- II. Andante - Allegretto Tranquillo Quasi Andantino
- III. Molto Allegro
- Wedding Cake - Caprice-Valse Op.76
- Africa Fantaisie Op.89
Customer Reviews:
A very good collection of moving compositions........2007-05-07
We heard the Piano Concerto No. 5 in F on National Public Radio and decided that we must have this piece of music in our CD collection. We selected this CD since the two CDs allowed us to purchase all 5 of Camille Saint-Saens' Piano Concertos. This CD has become one of our favorites and we play it often, discovering more interest in the work of Saint-Saens with each playing.
Camille Saint-Saens' sense of drama, his lyric runs, his ability to evoke mystery, all make this listening experience highly recommended. I am fascinated by the way Saint-Saens creates rich variations of his themes as he takes us from movement to movement. Saint-Saens has the ability to develop ethereal melodies and variations on themes that are hypnotic and mystical. His piano runs are pushed for dramatic effect. The creative and amusing variations of his themes are pleasant and amusing.
This CD is highly recommended. In addition to the 5 Piano Concertos, Saint-Saens' Wedding Cake Caprice and the Africa Fantaisie are included. I found Jean-Phillippe Collard's interpretation to be masterful and rich, capturing the vast complexity and variation that Saint-Saens created in his compositions.
Nothing but the Best.......2007-04-01
To the other reviewer, you are a fool to give these CDs anything less than 5 stars, and you should be banished to hearing Fur Elise permanently until you repent of your ways. As a classical piano composer and teacher, I am definetely spoiled with piano music, it's true. But this is a real gem, TRUE ART, where even a metronome is rendered petty and useless to this, thank you very, very, much. Saint-Saen's 5 Piano Concertos, and David Helfgott's performance of Rachmaninoff's 3rd Piano Concerto IS as good as it gets. This is art with a soul, their is no hidden agenda, no undercurrent to this music. This recording is fine, don't listen to the other reviewer. I would give it 10 stars if I had the option. Much of these 2 CDs is compltely unique in the realm of piano music. The 2nd Mov. of the 5th Concerto is unforgettable, just to name one. Go ahead and get this one, if you don't, you are sinning, right now.
Buy it for all the five concerti, just don't expect much from the second concerto.......2006-06-01
There are two albums of Saint-Saens' complete piano concerti available in the Amazon catalogue. This from EMI classics, and one from Decca. With two extra tracks thrown in (the "Wedding Cake" waltz, Opus 76, and "Africa Fantaisie," opus 89), this is the better bargain. Plus it's cheaper. I highly recommend it for these reasons, especially if your only interest is familiarization with all of Saint-Saens' five piano concertos, as was mine. Whether the Charles Dutoit performance is better, I can't say as I don't own it.
As for the performances in this disc:
My interest in Saint-Saens' piano concertos was fired up when I first heard his 2nd Piano Concerto performed by Cecile Licad. That stupendous performance (yes, I considered that adjective very carefully and find it absolutely appropriate) was also conducted by Andre Previn and accompanied by the London Philharmonic Orchestra (another Brit orchestra). That recording is also available in Amazon catalogue. Do buy it if you are a connoisseur of Saint Saens' second piano concerto. It is a definitive performance, one that am sure even Saint-Saens would approve of VERY enthusiastically. Just listen to the cadenza of the first movement in the Music Sampler and hear for yourselves.
Now back to this album. As noted earlier, it is also conducted by Andre Previn. But what a difference a pianist makes. I refer here to the performance of the second piano concerto. I skip it, actually. Having been spoiled--blissfully, ecstatically--by the Licad stunner, I cannot bear the stultifying interpretation in this one. I just listen to the other piano concertos and enjoy them. These piano concertos are excitingly atmospheric, with the composer's unmistakable mix of boister and mystery. As noted from an Amazon review of the Decca album, a recording of all of Saint Saent's five piano concerti is rare enough. So for that reason and the cheap price, this album is a good buy. I just try not wonder how other pianists, like Licad for instance, would play them. I just enjoy Saint Saent's piano music, The other performances are still very enjoyable, excluding other considerations. After I received this album from my sister as her Amazon gift, I now know that Saint Saen's piano concertos really rock!!! They are for me.
For the price and the extra tracks I'd give this album four stars. But for its dismal second piano concerto (cringe, cringe), three stars.
Average customer rating:
- Brilliant sonics and fine, assured playing
- Monochrome austerity
- Music fan/July2/2003 and John Coughlin's revviews
- Idiomatic piano, shrill strings
- Magnificent achievement!
|
Prokofiev: The Five Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: Decca
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Similar Items:
- Saint-Saëns: Piano Concertos 1-5
- Prokofiev: 7 Symphonies; Lieutenant Kijé
- Prokofiev: The Complete Symphonies
- Rachmaninov: Piano Concertos Nos. 1 - 4
- Mendelssohn: Piano Concertos
ASIN: B0000041LA
Release Date: 1997-08-26 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 1. Allegro brioso
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 2. Andante assai-
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In D Flat Major, Op. 10: 3. Allegro scherzando
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 1. Vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 2. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 3. Moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In B Flat Major, Op. 53: 4. Vivace
- Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 2. Moderato ben accentuato
- Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 3. Toccata: Allegro con fuoco
- Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 4. Larghetto
- Piaon Concerto No. 5 In G Major, Op. 55: 5. Vivo
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 1. Andantino
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 2. Scherzo: Vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 3. Intermezzo: Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 16: 4. Allegro tempestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 1. Andante -- Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Major, Op. 26: 2. Terna con variazioni
- 3. Allegro, ma non troppo
Amazon.com
During the 1970s, Vladimir Ashkenazy recorded virtually the entire standard piano repertoire, largely successfully. Then he turned to conducting, at which he's steadily become more successful. Although his initial efforts on the podium were not greeted with universal acclaim, you've got to respect the fact that he moved onto something new rather than attempting to revisit the same music again and risk not doing it nearly as well. Among his complete editions was this set of Prokofiev piano concertos, and they are among the best things that he did. At two discs for the price of one, it's a fine way to acquire all of these exciting works. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
Brilliant sonics and fine, assured playing.......2006-07-13
By any standard this is very good Prokofiev playing. Ashkenazy strikes me as one of the most Westernized of Russian pianists, and his approach here, seconded by Previn's conducting, avoids rawness and astringency in favor of combined lyricism and strength. Perhaps because Decca's sound is so natural, the piano remains limpid and sparkling throughout--don't expect volcanos and thunder a la Argerich and Richter.
The only real shortcoming is that these works can use a lot of what Ashkenazy leaves out: bite, wit, irony, and brash attack. Concerto #2 is a specialty of this pianist and comes off beautifully--its lyricism suits him. Concerto #1 seems too middle-of-the-road, which can also be said of the left-hand concerto #4, but the most familiar work, Concerto #3, is authoritative and strong throughout. Previn seems more alert in this work, too.
I should mention that although Ashkenazy's approach is much less wild than Argerich and Richter, the Gramophone described these recordings as overflowing with 'panache, swagger and firebrand audacity.' I guess it all depends on where you're coming from.
Monochrome austerity.......2006-06-15
Although the remastering job done by Decca was terrible, Ashkenazy comes through with fine playing. He plays all 5 concerti well, although 1 and 2 stand out as the best for me. As one would expect, Ashkenazy plays his compatriot's piece with generous sympathy. He plays in a Prokofievian style avoiding any sort of color or singing tone. It is nevertheless ravishing playing.
In addition to the fine rubatos here and there, it is played on an even level, without a singing tone. It is by far a monochromatic reading with no color or excessive dynamics. Austerity is paramount also with no voluptuousness.
I love the second concerto most, and Ashkenazy's fine, sensible tempi stand out. It is not hurried or rushed playing with no lethargy either.
Music fan/July2/2003 and John Coughlin's revviews.......2006-03-11
I totally agree with these 2 reviews
I believe the fault here lies more with Previn, and thus holds back Ashkenazy "somewhat", as Ashkenazy is not stellar as one would expect.
, There are some high points, but overall I strongly agree with A Music Fans recommend of Krainev, the finest set on record.Yes I've heard all avaliable recordings in comparison.
If you like this set then OBVIOUSLY you will vote on my review as follows:
, no this review was not helpful
But at least I'm truthful, w/o the hype.
Besides I've heard all the avaliable, while others that promote this set has not.
Idiomatic piano, shrill strings.......2006-02-11
Ashkenazys playing has a certain "definite" (slightly clanky and strutting) style to it. For example the last part of cto3 mvt2, it is explicit and playful, other interpreters miss this out. And the beginning of cto3 mvt3, it sounds idiomatic/ folklore to me, (Russian, or Klezmer, or just a song and dance man, I don't know which). I like his playing better than any other's in these works. Sadly enough, the shrill strings deprive the recordings of their beauty, especially unfortunate in cto 3. If the orchestral tone of this recording could be restored, it would make me so happy.
In the meantime, I enjoy the Janis/Kondrashin cto 3. It seems to have similar qualities as Ashkenazy. For cto 2, I enjoy Baloghova/Ancerl/CzechPO on Supraphon.
Magnificent achievement!.......2005-02-02
I have this recording of all five Prokofiev concertos. The rapport between soloist and conductor is first rate. The fact that Andre Previn is an excellent pianist helps mould a great understanding and the fact that both soloist and conductor got on so well helps so much.
Vladimir Ashkenazy played all the concertos very brilliantly.He doesn't overcook the interpretation and it sounds better for it.His recording of the second concerto is amazing. Remember he used that with his New York debut in the fifties with Bernstein. I find this collection to be such an achievement. I thoroughly recommend this CD.
Average customer rating:
- A Must!
- great music
- The one you need
|
Best of the Canadian Brass
Manufacturer: Sony
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Similar Items:
- The Essential Canadian Brass
- Go For Baroque! - The Canadian Brass
- The Christmas Album
- The Canadian Brass: Greatest Hits
- Basin Street
ASIN: B0000026Z3
Release Date: 1989-11-20 |
Tracks:
- Vespers Of The Blessed Virgin: Deus in adjutorium - Monteverdi
- Canzon V - Canadian Brass
- Canon In D - Pachelbel
- Le Nozze Di Figaro, K. 492: Overture - Mozart
- Le Nozze Di Figaro, K. 492: Non Piu Andrai - Mozart
- Ave Verum Corpus - Mozart
- Die Zauberflote: Der Holle Rache - Mozart
- Exultate Jubilate: Alleluia - Mozart
- Piano sonata in A major: Rondo Alla Turca - Mozart
- The Four Seasons: I - Allegro (Spring) - Canadian Brass
- The Four Seasons: II - Largo (Winter) - Canadian Brass
- The Four Seasons: III - Presto (Summer) - Canadian Brass
- The Four Seasons: IV - Allegro (Autumn) - Canadian Brass
- Contrapunctus I (Andante Sostenuto) - Bach
- Contrapunctus XIII (Rectus, Allegro Spiritoso) - Bach
- Basin Street Blues - Canadian Brass
- Chinatown, My Chinatown - Canadian Brass
- Just A Closer Walk With Thee - Traditional
- The Saints' Halleluja - Canadian Brass
Customer Reviews:
A Must!.......2004-12-28
This is a must have for any fan of brass instrumentals. (Especially if you are a fan of the Canadian Brass.)
great music.......2000-12-18
I just bought this cd yesterday and i love it already. as a trumpeter, i can really enjoy and appreciate the music they perform. i was quite intrigued hearing canon in D (currently playing right now on my stereo), et al.
The one you need.......2000-06-26
If you are to buy only 1 CD for Brass Enemble, Get this! It captured the BEST of the Candian Brass (one of the top brass enemble in the world). It has all the nice tunes, e.g. Four Seasons, Cannon in D, etc. Strongly recommended.
Average customer rating:
- excellent beethoven cycle
- Nice Surprise!
|
Beethoven: The 5 Piano Concertos; Choral Fantasy
Manufacturer: RCA
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Similar Items:
- Beethoven: Symphonies Nos. 1-9 (Box Set)
- Mozart: The Piano Sonatas; Fantasias & Rondos
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- Brahms: 7 Fantasies, Op. 116; 4 Piano Pieces, Op. 119; Sonata No. 2, Op. 2
ASIN: B0000CNTLV
Release Date: 2003-12-09 |
Customer Reviews:
excellent beethoven cycle.......2005-04-16
Emanuel Ax really understands the poetic heart of this music. He highlights the dark melancholy of beethoven's music without ever becoming sacharine or sentimental. However, those looking for a barn burnig version of these concertos would do well to look elseware: Ax's performance is understated, with a focus on nuance, precision, color and dynamic shading. He never resorts to vulgar clanging in the forte passages. While not lacking in passion, his performance simly lets the music speak for itself.
One minor quible: the Choral Fantasy sounds like it was recorded in a TB ward, and the overall sound of this piece is notably inferior to the rest of the cycle. This is understandable, because the Fantasy was recorded live and at a different venue than the other recordings.
For an excellent Choral Fantasy, check out Helene Grimaud's "Credo" on DG.
Buy this set for the concertos.
Nice Surprise!.......2004-04-11
I bought this box set of Beethovens piano concertos on a whim about one month ago and what a nice surprise that turned out to be. The CD containing concertos 3 and 4 has been (by far) the most frequently played disc in our household ever since. Ax, with his sublime technique, really shines in these two and Previn is in perfect sync with him. I also have to commend the producers: The sound, balance etc. is excellent and puts a lot of more recent recordings to shame.
Average customer rating:
- Sound quality poor
- Warmth and humour of Mozart
- A genius in his invaluable youth!
- Barenboim
- Great performances of inspired music
|
Mozart: The Complete Piano Concertos
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Similar Items:
- Mozart:The Complete Piano Sonatas and Variations
- Mozart: Chamber Music
- Mozart: 51 Symphonies
- Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas / Daniel Barenboim
- Mozart: The Violin Sonatas
ASIN: B00000C2KO
Release Date: 1998-10-20 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: II. Andante - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: III. Rondo - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: I. Allegro spiritoso - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: III. Molto allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: I. Allegro maestoso - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: III. Presto
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: III. Molto allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: II. Andante ma un poco adagio - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: I. Allegro aperto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: II. Andante un poco adagio - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: III. Rondeau (Allegro) - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': I. Allegro aperto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': III. Rondeau- Tempo di menuetto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: II. Andantino - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: III. Rondeau: Presto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: I. Allegro meastoso - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: I. Allegretto
- Concert Rondo For Piano And Orchestra No. 1 In D Major, K 382
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: I. Allegretto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: II. Largetto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: III. Tempo di Menuetto
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: III. Allegretto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: III. Allegro - Adagio - Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: I. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: II. Andantino
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: III. Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: III. Allegro di molto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart, arr. Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: III. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': I. Allegro - Cadenza (Wanda Landowska) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': III. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: I. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: II. Andante un poco sostenuto
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: III. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: II. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: III. Allegro assai - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: I. Allegro - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: II. Romanze
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: III. Rondeau: Allegro assai - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: I. Allegro spiritoso - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: III. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: I. Allegro maestoso - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: III. Allegro vivace assai - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: III. Rondo: Allegro - Cadenza (Edwin Fischer) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: II. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: III. Allegro assai
Customer Reviews:
Sound quality poor.......2006-04-26
The sound quality is poor and the balance no good.
Disappointing from a major company such as EMI and major performer such as Barenboim.
Their similar set of Beethoven sonatas with Barenboim (70s) is much more acceptable.
Warmth and humour of Mozart.......2006-03-23
We bought this as a gift for a friend, as we already own it, and think it is the best thing in our CD library. Barenboim brings out the humour and the warmth in the concertos without being over-romantic, and brings emotional richness to his performance - in great contrast to the rather mechanical and cold renditions by other performers who are supposed to be Mozartian 'experts'. We think Amadeus would approve whole-heartedly of these performances.
A genius in his invaluable youth!.......2005-03-30
When Daniel Barenboim decided to face the huge challenge of playing the Complete Set of Piano Concerts he was making (without knowing at this moment)one of his multiple artistic triumphs.
The first impressive detail to remark is the convincent maturity and silent self discipline self impossed by himself. But the genius of Barenboim's playing is the absolute conviction he always sounds so natural. And hardly you will find the minimum sensation of effort as you just can feel it with Brendel for instance.
I still have these recordings in vynil format and from time to time I compare both formats. Go for these records and you will not only enjoy to Mozart's genius but the grandness of a real Keyboard Giant in his twenties.
After the wise decision to perform and conduct the orchestra from the piano, the interpretations acquired a major enrichment and enlightment, and somehow these recordings constitute the previous step for that decision.
To make a major disection of Concert by Concert would be extremely interseting but it would be equally long. There are some higlights performances and in my opinion these are: The 24th, 23th, 19th,12th, 25th, 14th, 15th and the first six.
In honor to the truth there are unbeatable major versions in other performances.
The 9th I find to Geza Anda, the 18 th Andras Schiff, 20th Myra Hess with Walter in last fifties, 21 th Casadesus and Munch in the last forties not available in CD format, 22th Fisher and Serkin, 26 th Gulda Harnoncourt, 27th Haskill and Curzon.
Absolutely recommended for every real Mozart's admirer.
Barenboim.......2005-03-17
Daniel Barenboim is one of the best pianists around. He DOES NOT play Mozart too Beethoven-like. I love these recordings, and as a pianist myself, I know that Barenboim delivers very good performances of these beautiful pieces. This set is also probably just as good as the $150 Marriner/Brendel set, and at a fraction of the price. The sound quality is very good. HIGHLY recommended.
Great performances of inspired music.......2004-11-06
This set is beautifully performed and is also priced competitively. I am very satisfied with my purchase, though I'm sorry it doesn't include the concertos for 2 and 3 pianos.
Barenboim's own cadenzas are enjoyable. I don't notice any lack of maturity in the playing, but this may be my inexperience!
Some prefer Ashkenazy, but it is quite a bit more expensive [though it does include those works just mentioned].
I am confident most readers will be very happy with this set.
Highly recommended
Average customer rating:
- Academic and expressive
- Not first tier, but pretty decent nonetheless
- A Warmer, More Expressive Brendel
- Brendel & Levine - great performance
- A first rate performance much preferable to his later work
|
Beethoven: The Five Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: Philips
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 2
- Brahms: Concertos for Piano No. 1 & 2, Fantasia Op. 116
- Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 1
- Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas
- Beethoven: Variations & Vignettes
ASIN: B0000041MN
Release Date: 1997-07-15 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C, Op. 15: I. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C, Op. 15: II. Largo
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In C, Op. 15: III. Rondo: Allegro scherzando
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B-Flat, Op. 19: I. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B-Flat, Op. 19: II. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B-Flat, Op. 19: III. Rondo: Molto allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: I. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: II. Largo
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In C Minor, Op. 37: III. Rondo: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G, Op. 58: I. Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G, Op. 58: II. Andante con moto
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G, Op. 58: III. Rondo: Vivace
Tracks:
- Piano Concert No. 5 In E-Flat, Op. 73 'The Emperor': I. Allegro
- Piano Concert No. 5 In E-Flat, Op. 73 'The Emperor': II. Adagio un poco mosso
- Piano Concert No. 5 In E-Flat, Op. 73 'The Emperor': III. Rondo: Allegro
Amazon.com
Recorded live in 1983, Alfred Brendel's third go-round with these works drastically improves on his previous Beethoven concerto cycles. He finds a calmer, more direct route to the Emperor Concerto, although the Fourth's first movement is still pock-marked with finicky phrase adjustments that pull focus from the music's poetic arcs. Levine provides sympathetic and alert support, yet is much more than a mere deferential accompanist. --Jed Distler
Customer Reviews:
Academic and expressive.......2005-05-31
Alfred Brendel is probably the most knowledgeable Beethoven interpreter that we have seen in the past half century along with Richard Goode. It also helps that he is a phenomenal pianist and chamber musician. When listening to these performances I got a sense of a warmer more intimate ideal for the works, not everywhere, it was as soloistic as these need to be, but the connection between melody and accompaniment was very well balanced right on par with Fleisher and Szell. Levine gives the music everything it needs and the Chicago Symphony plays wonderfully. The live recording gives these works a wonderful atmosphere and the audience is reverently silent. If you want to seek out individual performances of these concertos by all means do it but for a box set of them all I would recommend this as well as his more recent with Rattle, as well as Fleisher and Arrau. All of them are wonderful however this is by far the best live recording of these works. Highly recommended
Not first tier, but pretty decent nonetheless.......2003-10-24
Echoing another reviewer, I don't believe Brendel's third go-round with the Beethoven concerto cycle is on a par with Arrau or Ashkenazy, but it is by far Brendel's best effort, demonstrating lyricism that, unfortunately, one cannot always depend on. It is a worthy addition to the serious music lover's collection, although I would not want to make it my only resource for the Beethoven concerti.
A Warmer, More Expressive Brendel.......2001-04-04
Alfred Brendel doesn't come across as a meticulous craftsman, but instead, as a lyrical, joyful interpreter of Beethoven in this version of Beethoven's piano concerto cycle which he recorded with James Levine and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at the CSO's Ravinia Festival in the early 1980's. While this won't replace my recordings of Arrau, Perahia, Kovacevich or Ashkenazy performing these concerti, Brendel's third traversal is one of the best performed - and recorded - versions currently available. His warm, expressive playing reaches its peak in the last two concerti. Both Levine and the CSO are admirable, sympathetic accompanists. If you are looking for your first set of Beethoven piano concertos or your latest, then you certainly won't go wrong with these fine performances.
Brendel & Levine - great performance.......2000-07-27
Quite simply, Brendel & Levine create one of the most emotionally rewarding performances of the Beethoven piano concertos - especially the 4th concerto.
A first rate performance much preferable to his later work.......1999-03-31
In this release, Brendel again ventures - or should I say, ventured (back in 1983)? - forth on well-trodden ground, but his performance is defeinitely the best he has produced so far and much better than his recent live performances (BPO, VPO). It has a clarity and freshness that stands in sharp contrast to his later, more rigid and inflexilbe style. Levine and the CSO provide a perfect orchestral foil for his playing. The range and quality of sound are impeccable as well. (Wolfgang, from Vienna, Austria)
Average customer rating:
- The one collection I cannot imagine being without
- MASTERY
- Magisterial... mystical
- Beethoven + Arrau = Divinity
- Beethoven himself would be proud.
|
Beethoven: The Complete Piano Sonatas & Concertos
Claudio Arrau , Janos Starker , Ludwig van Beethoven , Bernard Haitink , Eliahu Inbal , Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam , New Philharmonia Orchestra , and Henryk Szeryng
Manufacturer: Philips
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Beethoven
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Similar Items:
- Liszt: Piano Works
- Chopin: The Piano Works
- Schubert: The Piano Sonatas
- Brahms: Works for Solo Piano
- Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier
ASIN: B00000C2F7
Release Date: 1999-11-09 |
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No. 1 In F Minor, Op. 2 No. 1: 1 Allegro
- Piano Sonata No. 1 In F Minor, Op. 2 No. 1: 2. Adagio
- Piano Sonata No. 1 In F Minor, Op. 2 No. 1: 3. Menuetto. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No. 1 In F Minor, Op. 2 No. 1: 4. Prestissimo
- Piano Sonata No. 2 In A, Op. 2 No. 2: 1. Allegro vivace
- Piano Sonata No. 2 In A, Op. 2 No. 2: 2. Largo appassionato
- Piano Sonata No. 2 In A, Op. 2 No. 2: 3. Scherzo. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No. 2 In A, Op. 2 No. 2: 4. Rondo. Grazioso
- Piano Sonata No. 5 In C Minor, Op. 10 No. 1: 1. Allegro molto e con brio
- Piano Sonata No. 5 In C Minor, Op. 10 No. 1: 2. Adagio molto
- Piano Sonata No. 5 In C Minor, Op. 10 No. 1: 3. Finale. Prestissimo
- Piano Sonata No. 19 In G Minor, Op. 49 No. 1: 1. Andante
- Piano Sonata No. 19 In G Minor, Op. 49 No. 1: 2. Rondo. Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.3 In C, Op.2 No.3: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Sonata No.3 In C, Op.2 No.3: 2. Adagio
- Piano Sonata No.3 In C, Op.2 No.3: 3. Scherzo. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.3 In C, Op.2 No.3: 4. Allegro assai
- Piano Sonata No.4 In E Flat, Op.7: 1. Allegro molto e con brio
- Piano Sonata No.4 In E Flat, Op.7: 2. Largo, con gran espressione
- Piano Sonata No.4 In E Flat, Op.7: 3. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.4 In E Flat, Op.7: 4. Rondo. Poco allegretto e grazioso
- 6 Piano Veriations In F On An Original Theme, Op.34
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.6 In F, Op.10 No.2: 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.6 In F, Op.10 No.2: 2. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No.6 In F, Op.10 No.2: 3. Presto
- Piano Sonata No.7 In D, Op.10 No.3: 1. Presto
- Piano Sonata No.7 In D, Op.10 No.3: 2. Largo e mesto
- Piano Sonata No.7 In D, Op.10 No.3: 3. Menuetto. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.7 In D, Op.10 No.3: 4. Rondo. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.8 in C minor, Op.13 'Pathetique': 1. Grave - Allegro di molto e con brio
- Piano Sonata No.8 in C minor, Op.13 'Pathetique': 2. Adagio cantabile
- Piano Sonata No.8 in C minor, Op.13 'Pathetique': 3. Rondo. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.9 In E, Op.14 No.2: 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.9 In E, Op.14 No.2: 2. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No.9 In E, Op.14 No.2: 3. Rondo. Allegro comodo
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.10 In G, Op.14 No.2: 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.10 In G, Op.14 No.2: 2. Andante
- Piano Sonata No.10 In G, Op.14 No.2: 3. Scherzo. Allegro assai
- Piano Sonata No.11 In B Falt, Op.22: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Sonata No.11 In B Falt, Op.22: 2. Adagio con molta espressione
- Piano Sonata No.11 In B Falt, Op.22: 3. Minuetto
- Piano Sonata No.11 In B Falt, Op.22: 4. Rondo. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No.12 In A Flat, Op.26: 1. Andante con Variazioni
- Piano Sonata No.12 In A Flat, Op.26: 2. Scherzo. Allegro molto
- Piano Sonata No.12 In A Flat, Op.26: 3. Marcia Funebre sulla morte d'un Eroe
- Piano Sonata No.12 In A Flat, Op.26: 4. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.25 In G, Op.79: 1. Presto alla tedesca
- Piano Sonata No.25 In G, Op.79: 2. Andante
- Piano Sonata No.25 In G, Op.79: 3. Vivace
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.13 In E Flat, Op.27 No.1: 1. Andante - Allegro - Tempo I
- Piano Sonata No.13 In E Flat, Op.27 No.1: 2. Allegro molto e vivace
- Piano Sonata No.13 In E Flat, Op.27 No.1: 3. Adagio con espressione
- Piano Sonata No.13 In E Flat, Op.27 No.1: 4. Allegro vivace - Tempo I - Presto
- Piano Sonata No.14 In C Sharp Minor, Op.27 No.2 'Moonlight': 1. Adagio sostenuto
- Piano Sonata No.14 In C Sharp Minor, Op.27 No.2 'Moonlight': 2. Allegrettro
- Piano Sonata No.14 In C Sharp Minor, Op.27 No.2 'Moonlight': 3. Presto agitato
- Piano Sonata No.15 In D, Op.28 'Pastorale': 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.15 In D, Op.28 'Pastorale': 2. Andante
- Piano Sonata No.15 In D, Op.28 'Pastorale': 3. Scherzo. Allegro vivace
- Piano Sonata No.15 In D, Op.28 'Pastorale': 4. Rondo. Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No. 22 In F, Op.54: 1. In Tempo d'un Menuetto
- Piano Sonata No. 22 In F, Op.54: 2. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.16 In G, Op.31 No.1: 1. Allegro vivace
- Piano Sonata No.16 In G, Op.31 No.1: 2. Adagio grazioso
- Piano Sonata No.16 In G, Op.31 No.1: 3. Rondo. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No.17 In D Minor, Op.31 No.2 'Tempest': 1. Largo - Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.17 In D Minor, Op.31 No.2 'Tempest': 2. Adagio
- Piano Sonata No.17 In D Minor, Op.31 No.2 'Tempest': 3. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata No.18 In E Flat, Op.31 No.3: 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.18 In E Flat, Op.31 No.3: 2. Scherzo. Alllegretto vivace
- Piano Sonata No.18 In E Flat, Op.31 No.3: 3. Menuetto. Moderato e grazioso
- Piano Sonata No.18 In E Flat, Op.31 No.3: 4. Presto con fuoco
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.21 In C, Op.53 'Waldstein': 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Sonata No.21 In C, Op.53 'Waldstein': 2. Introduzione. Adagio molto - Rondo. Allegretto moderato - Prestissimo
- 15 Piano Variations And Fugue In E Flat, Op.35 'Eroica' Variations: Inroduzione col Basso del Tema. Allegretto vivace
- 15 Piano Variations And Fugue In E Flat, Op.35 'Eroica' Variations: Variazioni I-XV
- 15 Piano Variations And Fugue In E Flat, Op.35 'Eroica' Variations: Finale. Alla Fuga. Allegro con brio - Andante con moto
- 32 Piano Variations In C Minor On An Original Theme, WoO 80
- Rondo In G, Op.51 No.2
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.23 In F Minor, Op.57 'Appassionata': 1. Allegro assai
- Piano Sonata No.23 In F Minor, Op.57 'Appassionata': 2. Andante con moto
- Piano Sonata No.23 In F Minor, Op.57 'Appassionata': 3. Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.24 In F Sharp, Op.78 'For Therese': 1. Adagio cantabile - Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.24 In F Sharp, Op.78 'For Therese': 2. Allegro vivace
- Piano Sonata No.26 In E Flat, Op.81a 'Les adieux': 1. Das Lebewohl. Adagio - Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.26 In E Flat, Op.81a 'Les adieux': 2. Abwesenheit. Andante espressivo
- Piano Sonata No.26 In E Flat, Op.81a 'Les adieux': 3. Das Wiedersehn. Vivacissimamente
- Piano Sonata No.27 In E Minor, Op.90: 1. Mit Lebhaftigkeit und durchaus mit Empfindung und Ausdruck
- Piano Sonata No.27 In E Minor, Op.90: 2. Nicht zu geschwind und sehr singbar vorgetragen
- Piano Sonata No.20 In G, Op.49 No.2: 1. Allegro, ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.20 In G, Op.49 No.2: 2. Tempo di Menuetto
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.28 In A, Op.101: 1. Etwas lebhaft und mit der innigsten Empfindung. Allegretto, ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.28 In A, Op.101: 2. Lebhaft. Marschmassig. Vivace alla Marcia
- Piano Sonata No.28 In A, Op.101: 3. Langsam, und sehnsuchtsvoll. Adagio, ma non troppo, con affetto
- Piano Sonata No.28 In A, Op.101: 4. Geschwind, doch nicht zu sehr und mit Entschlossenheit. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.29 In B Flat, Op.106 'Hammerklavier': 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata No.29 In B Flat, Op.106 'Hammerklavier': 2 Scherzo. Assai vivace - Presto - Prestissimo - Tempo I
- Piano Sonata No.29 In B Flat, Op.106 'Hammerklavier': 3. Adagio sostenuto. Appassionato e con molto sentimento
- Piano Sonata No.29 In B Flat, Op.106 'Hammerklavier': 4. Largo - Allegro risoluto
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata No.30 In E, Op.109: 1. Vivave, ma non troppo - Adagio espressivo - Tempo I -2. Prestissimo
- Piano Sonata No.30 In E, Op.109: 3. Gesangvoll, mit innigster Empfindung. Andante molto cantabile ed espressivo
- Piano Sonata No.31 In A Flat, Op.110: 1. Moderato cantabile molto espressivo
- Piano Sonata No.31 In A Flat, Op.110: 2. Allegro molto
- Piano Sonata No.31 In A Flat, Op.110: 3. Adagio ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.31 In A Flat, Op.110: 4. Fuga. Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Sonata No.32 In C Minor, Op111: 1. Maestoso - Allegro con brio ed appassionato
- Piano Sonata No.32 In C Minor, Op111: 2. Arietta. Adagio molto semplice e cantabile
Tracks:
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Tema : Vivace - Variation I. Alla marcia maestoso
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation II Poco allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation III L'istesso tempo
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation IV Un poco piu vivace
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation V Allegro vivace
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation VI Allegro ma non troppo e serioso
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation VII Un poco piu allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation VIII Poco vivace
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation IX Allegro pesante e risoluto
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation X Presto
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XI Allegretto
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XII Un poco piu moto
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XIII Vivace
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XIV Grave e maestoso
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XV Presto scherzando
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XVI Allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XVII
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XVIII Poco moderato
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XIX Presto
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XX Andante
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXI Allegro con brio - Meno allegro - Tempo I - Meno allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXII Allegro molto alla 'Notte giorno faricar' di Mozart
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXIII Allegro assai
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXIV Fughetta. Andante
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXV Allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXVI
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXVII Vivace
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXVIII Allegro
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXIX Adagio ma non troppo
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXX Andante sempre cantabile
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXXI Largo, molto espressivo
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXXII Fuga. Allegro - Poco adagio
- 33 Piano Variations In C On A Waltz By Anton Diabelli, Op.120: Variation XXXIII Tempo di minuetto moderato
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No.1 In C, Op. 15: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No.1 In C, Op. 15: 2. Largo
- Piano Concerto No.1 In C, Op. 15: 3. Rondo. Allegro scherzando
- Piano Concerto No.2 In B Flat, Op.19: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No.2 In B Flat, Op.19: 2. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No.2 In B Flat, Op.19: 3. Rondo. Molto allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No.3 in C minor, Op.37: 1. Allegro con brio
- Piano Concerto No.3 in C minor, Op.37: 2. Largo
- Piano Concerto No.3 in C minor, Op.37: 3. Rondo. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No.4 In G, Op.58: 1. Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No.4 In G, Op.58: 2. Andante con moto
- Piano Concerto No.4 In G, Op.58: 3. Rondo. Vivace
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No.5 In E Flat, Op.73 'Emperor': 1. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No.5 In E Flat, Op.73 'Emperor': 2. Adagio un poco mosso
- Piano Concerto No.5 In E Flat, Op.73 'Emperor': 3. Rondo. Allegro
- Triple Concerto For Piano, Violin And Cello In C, Op.56: 1. Allegro
- Triple Concerto For Piano, Violin And Cello In C, Op.56: 2. Largo
- Triple Concerto For Piano, Violin And Cello In C, Op.56: 3. Rondo alla Polacca
Amazon.com
Claudio Arrau played with seriousness of purpose that could make other pianists seem like dilettantes and with respect for the composer's score that bordered on veneration. He had nothing but scorn for pianists who played the opening of Beethoven's Opus 111 with two hands instead of one because there were fewer risks. If something was technically difficult, Arrau assumed that the composer had written it that way because the difficulties had an expressive value that it was the interpreter's duty to find.
Arrau's devotion to Beethoven is memorialized by this budget-priced, 14-CD collection of his recordings, mostly from the 1960s, of the composer's 32 sonatas, five concertos (with Bernard Haitink conducting the Concertgebouw Orchestra of Amsterdam), and most important sets of variations. His Beethoven is not always successful. His sometimes ponderous seriousness keeps early works, such as the Sonata No. 3 and the Concerto No. 2, from smiling, and his lack of spontaneity makes the whimsy in Sonata No. 26 and the "Diabelli Variations" sound labored. But in the composer's weightiest works, Arrau can produce revelations. Certainly, no one plays Sonata No. 32 better. The first movement sounds like thunder that comes ever closer and the finale's chains of trills, played with exquisite finish and expressive perfection, transport the listener to a higher realm. If Arrau could be single-minded in his devotion to the composer's score, he also believed that music could encompass everything. When Arrau was at his best--as he frequently is in this set--it does. --Stephen Wigler
Customer Reviews:
The one collection I cannot imagine being without.......2007-01-30
It would be absurd to recommend recommending one Beethoven cycle to the exclusion of all others, yet it is Arrau's cycle to which I repeatedly return, despite some flaws mentioned by other reviewers.
They are flaws which can be forgiven. Scherzi which would be brimming with mirth & vitality in the hands of others may come up short, but it is more than compensated for by the revelations to be found as Arrau explores every aspect of Beethoven at his most profound. There always seems to be something new to be discovered. Flabby? It is hard to imagine how someone could come to this conclusion.
Even the sound quality for recordings dating back into the 1960's has been remastered so as to be acceptable to all but the most spoiled of listeners, who apparently are satisfied only with the most seamless homogenized studio sound. Those who can't get past the slightly imperfect sound quality are focusing on the wrong details.
If the greatness of the performance were not enough, the price should be enough to convince any serious music lover to add these to a CD collection. One cannot overstate how rewarding this collection will be to anyone who does not yet know the artistry of Arrau.
MASTERY.......2007-01-26
One man's viewpoint: Arrau amazes me as he sets the notes down with such clean deliberation! Total command. No matter how fast Beethoven is charging along. And as Arrau gets every note, we find the real Beethoven genius shining through - after all, as raw material, this is some of the finest piano music anywhere. Of course, this playing delivers passion and heart-and-soul communication too. And a sense of commitment and strength.
I suggest this set - with about nine stars! Mastery in art. *** For a lighter, more joyful touch - and great tone - ALSO get hold of O'Conor's set of the 32. I suggest this set - with about nine stars!
Magisterial... mystical.......2006-11-03
I've been listening to Beethoven's sonatas for fifty years and have heard all of them by some, and some of them by all the available recorded performers. Overall, Claudio Arrau is my favorite interpreter of the sonatas. To me he has an inner affinity with Beethoven that is uncanny. Beethoven was a man o