Sviatoslav Richter
On this CD:
1. Pictures at an Exhibition (Kartinki s vïstavski), for piano
Composed by Modest Mussorgsky
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
2. Moments musicaux (6) for piano, D. 780 (Op. 94) No. 1 in C
Composed by Franz Schubert
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
3. Impromptus (4) for piano, D. 899 (Op. 90) No. 2 in E-flat
Composed by Franz Schubert
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
4. Impromptus (4) for piano, D. 899 (Op. 90) No. 4 in A-flat
Composed by Franz Schubert
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
5. Etude for piano in E major, Op. 10/3, CT 16
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
6. Valse oubliée, for piano No. 1, S. 215/1 (LW A311/1)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
7. Valse oubliée, for piano No. 2, S. 215/2 (LW A311/2)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
8. Feux-follets, etude for piano in B-flat Major (Transcendental Etude No. 5), S. 139/5 (LW A172/5) No. 05 Feux follets
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
9. Harmonies du soir, for piano (Transcendental Etude No. 11), S. 139/11 (LW A172/11) No. 11 Harmonies du soir
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
10. Preludes (13) for piano, Op.32 No. 12 in G-sharp minor
Composed by Sergey Rachmaninov
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
11. Piano Sonata No. 6 in A major ("War Sonata 1"), Op. 82
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
12. Piano Sonata No. 7 in B flat major ("War Sonata 2/Stalingrad"), Op. 83
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
13. Piano Sonata No. 8 in B flat major ("War Sonata 3"), Op. 84
Composed by Sergey Prokofiev
Performed by Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential recording
Sviatoslav Richter's 1958 recital recording here of Pictures at an Exhibition is worth the price of admission alone: simply put, it's a classic that has all too often fallen out of print. The performance makes this double-CD volume in Philips's Great Pianists of the 20th Century series one of the most enthralling in the catalogue. The Russian's power throughout the Pictures is truly infectious. "The Market-Place at Limoges" tickles the listener with bustling energy, while "The Great Gate of Kiev" is at its most riveting in the thunderous hands of Richter. The third movement of Prokofiev's Seventh Sonata chugs like a locomotive at full speed and with the types of deft touches that a jazz musician would provide. Aside from an incorrect track listing (the third Promenade in Pictures isn't listed in the notes as its own track), there's not a gaffe found on this excellent sampler. --Jason Verlinde
Sviatoslav Richter, Music, Fryderyk Chopin, Franz Liszt, Modest Mussorgsky, Sergey Prokofiev, Sergey Rachmaninov, Franz Schubert, Sviatoslav Teofilovich Richter, 20th/21st Century Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Music, Etude for Keyboard, Impromptu for Keyboard, Keyboard, Moment Musical for Keyboard, Prelude for Keyboard, Suite/Partita for Keyboard, Waltz for Keyboard
Average customer rating:
- There can't be any better!
- Wonderful smooth rendition
- Beethoven: Triple Concerto; Brahms: Double Concerto / Oistrakh, Rostropovich, Richter
- Beethoven? Brahms? Karajan? Oistrakh? Richter? Rostropovich? Szell? On One CD? Talk About Star Power!
- Glorious
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Great Recordings Of The Century - Beethoven: Triple Concerto; Brahms: Double Concerto / Oistrakh, Rostropovich, Richter
David Oistrakh , Mstislav Rostropovich , Sviatoslav Richter , Herbert von Karajan , and George Szell
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
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Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Great Recordings Of The Century - Brahms: Violin Sonatas nos 1 - 3 / Perlman, Ashkenazy
- Dvorák: Cello Concerto; Tchaikovsky / Karajan, Rostropovich,
- Shostakovich: Cello Concerto No1, Op107; Violin Concerto No1 (revised), Op99
- Tchaikovsky: Violin Concerto Op35; Brahms: Violin Concerto in D Op77
- Brahms: Ein deutsches Requiem [A German Requiem]
ASIN: B00000I7VO
Release Date: 1999-03-09 |
Tracks:
- Triple Concerto For Violin, Cello & Piano In C, Op. 56: I Allegro
- Triple Concerto For Violin, Cello & Piano In C, Op. 56: II Largo
- Triple Concerto For Violin, Cello & Piano In C, Op. 56: III Rondo alla polacca
- Double Concerto For Violin & Cello In A Minor, Op. 102: I Allegro
- Double Concerto For Violin & Cello In A Minor, Op. 102: II Andante
- Double Concerto For Violin & Cello In A Minor, Op. 102: III Vivace non troppo
Amazon.com
Among the concertos of Beethoven and Brahms, these two have always been stepchildren. One reason is their extreme difficulty; both composers were pianists, so Beethoven wrote an idiomatic part only for the piano. Brahms's friend Joseph Joachim offered advice for the violin concerto, but not for the Double Concerto, which was written as a peace offering after a falling-out. The Beethoven Triple Concerto demands utmost virtuosity, as well as intimate teamwork among the soloists, and that is exactly what these three supreme masters of their instruments bring to it. Free--indeed unaware--of technical problems, they give it a joyful, sparkling lightness. The piano ripples, the cello sings gorgeously, the violin soars ecstatically, the tone is intoxicatingly beautiful. The Finale is wistful, charming, lyrical, gently humorous; the ending is a big joke, with the cello and piano rumbling in the bass, while the violin whistles forlornly in the dark until they all join together. The Brahms is grand, majestic, dreamy, radiant, triumphant; the slow movement warm as dark velvet, the Finale genial and relaxed. Though the orchestra never covers the soloists, it explodes in the tutti passages, especially in the Beethoven, so you might keep a finger on the volume control. --Edith Eisler
Customer Reviews:
There can't be any better!.......2007-05-17
It is not for the names only.
I think it is a performance as Beethoven probably had in mind.
Wonderful smooth rendition.......2007-04-26
There is something magical about this recording. It is difficult to describe the smooth full sound that this recording presents. I own other recordings of the Brahms and the Beethoven and at first thought it a little extravagent to own another but I am very pleased I bought it.
Beethoven: Triple Concerto; Brahms: Double Concerto / Oistrakh, Rostropovich, Richter.......2007-01-18
I knew this recording and I received what I was expecting. Delivery and condition was great. Thanks.
Beethoven? Brahms? Karajan? Oistrakh? Richter? Rostropovich? Szell? On One CD? Talk About Star Power!.......2006-09-09
All those big names wouldn't mean a thing if the performances themselves were throw aways or showed little commitment, but that's hardly the case, this is probably the finest recordings of both works. Karajan and Richter for one had some rocky interpretative relations in their recording of Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto on DG. That was not a great record, where both musical giants pull and push to try and get their way. So yes, in some ways this Beethoven Triple Concerto presents even more challenges because there are four minds, four egos pitted together in one piece of music and that's not counting the greatest ego, Beethoven himself! Luckily everyone melds beautifully together, the three Russian masters are at their best, with Rostropovich a stand out and shining brightly. Meanwhile Karajan, the Austrian master conductor gives them his usual, grand, lush orchestral backdrop via the Berlin Philharmonic. This is warm-hearted, generous music-making between four fearsomely talented musicians.
The Brahms Double Concerto is just as fine, now we have the two string instrumentalists side by side. Oistrakh and Rostropovich communicate wonderfully together in this major Brahms piece. Szell backs them up every step of the way with his precise yet passionate conducting of the Cleveland Orchestra. The EMI recording sounds very good too in both works and the price is quite nice. An outstanding bargain.
Glorious.......2006-01-30
The unbroken tradition of Russian string playing is well-represented on this disc. The Double Concerto is especially wonderful, even rapturous. The two players are beautifully meshed, and Szell and the Cleveland sound warm and emotive, which they sometimes did not, on records and "live". The sessions they recorded for EMI (including a wonderful Dvorak Eighth, far surpassing their recoridng for Masterworks), captured something that often was not well projected.
The remastering captures this warmth, with more brightness than my LP copy of the Brahms ever had, at least after the initial playings.
Average customer rating:
- Beethoven for Babies
- Nicest classical CD I have found for my baby (& me)
- Ode To Beethoven
- Pseudoscientific crap, but some of the music is good here
- Nicest classical music CD I've found for my baby (& me)
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Beethoven for Babies
Manufacturer: Philips
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ASIN: B000009OU6
Release Date: 1998-08-11 |
Tracks:
- Six National Airs With Variations, Op. 105: The Cottage Maid (Welsh)
- Six National Airs With Variations, Op. 105: The Last Rose Of Summer (Irish)
- Six National Airs With Variations, Op. 105: Chiling O'Guirg (Irish)
- Six National Airs With Variations, Op. 105: English Bulls (Irish)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: St. Patrick's Day (Irish)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: O Mary, At The Window Be (Scottish)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Oh, Thou Are The Lad Of My Heart (Scottish)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Fur Elise
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Piano Sonata No. 8 In C Minor ('Pathetique') - Adagio cantabile
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: String Quartet No. 13 In B-Flat - Alla Danza Tedesca. Allegro assai
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Piano Sonata No. 7 In D - Menuetto (Allegro)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: The Creatures Of Prometheus - Finale. Allegretto
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Piano Sonata No. 18 In E-Flat - Menuetto (Moderato e grazioso)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Piano Sonata No. 20 In G - Tempo di menuetto
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Symphony No. 8 In F - Allegro scherzando
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Symphony No. 9 In D Minor ('Choral') - Ode To Joy
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Piano Sonata No. 15 In D ('Pastoral') - Rondo (Allegro ma non troppo)
- Ten National Airs With Variations, Op. 107: Symphony No. 6 In F ('Pastoral') - Hymn Of Thanksgiving
Amazon.com
For the parent looking to ease their child into a familiarity with classical music, this is a very well chosen set of Beethoven works. It begins with a generous selection of airs composed late in the composer's life. The presence of the flute as the lead instrument on these selections has a soothing quality that moves the ear in an ideally subtle way, especially as it gives way to the more excited piano sonata pieces. Zoltán Kocsis's reading of "Pathétique" is followed by Claudio Arrau's take on the 7th, 15th, and 18th sonatas and Sviatoslav Richter's lyrical take on the 20th ("Pastoral"). Programmed amidst the piano pieces, which are great studies in dynamics and musical spacing, are some fine orchestral snippets, none longer than five minutes. The collection does a fine balancing act, condensing works that don't inherently lend themselves to shortened renditions and carefully managing moods, entry, and egress to each segment. This is fine anthology work. --Andrew Bartlett
Customer Reviews:
Beethoven for Babies.......2007-05-21
My baby and I really enjoy this CD. It is so fun to feel the baby get excited when I play it. I have a pillow speaker and just place it right up against my stomach. It evens helps me to get in a nap or just rest for a while.
Nicest classical CD I have found for my baby (& me).......2005-09-01
This is a very pleasant CD to listen to, and I think the quality of the music is excellent. I enjoy listening to this with my 10 month old son, and we also listen to the radio and lots of modern music. I recently purchased 5 of the classical "Baby Einstein" CDs and I consider them to be inferior to this Beethoven for Babies CD. The Baby Einstein are very synthesized sounding and I think they are annoyingly mellow and kind of dopey. This Beethoven CD is beautiful. In fact I'm going to buy 1 or 2 more from this series.
Ode To Beethoven.......2005-05-13
The actual reason I bought this cd is for "Fur Elise" but it turned out to be much more than I bargained for. Before road rage sets in while sitting in a traffic jam during rush hour, play this. If you need to take it easy and escape from your reality, play this. Need something to play at work that's not explicit or offensive, play this. Of course, it's not Beethoven himself, but if you need some quiet time, play this. Even while you read, you could play this. If you want some authenticity to your collection, get Beethoven for Babies.
Pseudoscientific crap, but some of the music is good here.......2004-05-27
The 3 stars is only because the hucksters that put this together at least had the decency to tracks featuring Arrau & Richter on this CD. A lot of these "turn your baby into a genius with classical music" CDs and tapes feature only lousy musical performances from hack musicians you have never heard of.
That having been said, if you are stupid enough to believe any of this "Mozart Effect" horse manure --- which continues to have no support in any sort of controlled test environment --- then your babies will probably inherit your limited intellectual capacities & no amount of Beethoven & Mozart will ever be able to help them.
If, on the other hand, you are introducing Junior to classical music, you could do worse --- but you could also do better. Go get Arrau's complete Beethoven sonatas & concerti, get the Berg Quartett's complete Beethoven quartet cycle, and get John Eliot Gardiner's complete Beethoven symphonies --- just for a start. Also, don't stop with Beethoven & Mozart. My 9-month old daughter gets a diverse exposure to a thousand years of music, and very little is off limits. She got acquainted with the Bartok Quartets within her first couple of months, and it doesn't look like we have created an axe murderer or anything like that.
Anyway, if you want to create a classical music lover, do it right and go the distance, rather than doing it piecemeal with CDs like this. Your baby may still be a moron, but at least will be a moron with exquisite taste.
Nicest classical music CD I've found for my baby (& me).......2003-11-23
This is a very pleasant CD to listen to, and I think the quality of the music is excellent. I enjoy listening to this with my 10 month old son, and we also listen to the radio and lots of modern music. I recently purchased 5 of the classical "Baby Einstein" CDs and I consider them to be inferior to this Beethoven for Babies CD. The Baby Einstein are very synthesized sounding and I think they are annoyingly mellow and kind of dopey. This Beethoven CD is beautiful. In fact I'm going to buy 1 or 2 more from this series.
Average customer rating:
- Our favorite CD for all occasions
- Bach and Roll!
- My daughter loves this CD
- Soothing
- Classical, Jazz and Opera Bach all in one
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Bach for Babies
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- Build Your Baby's Brain
ASIN: B00000IIYV
Release Date: 1999-04-13 |
Tracks:
- Partita No. 1 in B-Flat: Praeludium
- Partita No. 1 in B-Flat: Menuets I & II
- English Suite No. 3 In G Minor: Gavotte I - Gavotte II Ou La Musette
- French Suite No. 6 In E: Allemande
- Suite No. 3 In D For Cello: Bourree I & II
- Suite No. 6 For Cello: Gavottes I-II
- Prelude In D Minor
- Orchestral Suite No. 2 In B Minor For Flutes And Strings: Badinerie
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 5 In D: Allegro
- Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I: Prelude No. 3
- Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I: Fugue No. 3
- (Prelude No. 2 from Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I): Be-Bop Bach
- (Fugue No. 2 From Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I): Dixie Bach
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 In G: Allegro
- Suite No. 4 For Cello: Bourree
- Partita No. 1 in B-Flat: Giga
- 'Little' Fugue In G Minor
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 4 In G: Presto
- Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1: Prelude No. 1 In C
- Concerto In D Minor For Oboe And Strings: Sicliano
- Suite In E-Flat For Flute And Harp: Gavotte en rondeau
- Sonata In E-Flat For Flute And Harp: Sicliano
- Minuet In D Minor
- Bist Du Bei Mir (When Thou Art Near)
Amazon.com
Programmed similarly to the Beethoven for Babies collection, this set of Bach compositions runs the emotional gamut, from the gently eye opening to the jumpy arm raising, collecting each set of pieces under a thematic header. The first several selections ("Waking Up") feature solo piano works that come directly from Bach's more pedagogic works, compositions intended for students to use as exercises to loosen their touch. Played superbly by pianist Sviatoslav Richter, as well as the Romero brothers (Pepe and Celedonio) on warm guitar, these compositions urge the ear to open. And then you come the pieces gathered under the "Playtime" heading: jazz pianist John Lewis picks up a couple pieces, as do the folks in Canadian Brass. Then the mood shift heads back to the sleepyhead state with "Winding Down" and "And So to Bed," each of which slows the tempo and quiets the passion to a doze. This is a fine set of Bach works. --Andrew Bartlett
Customer Reviews:
Our favorite CD for all occasions.......2005-05-15
This is absolutely my favorite CD that we bought for our baby! We've bought quite a few classical-music-for-baby compilations, and this is far and away the best. The music is fun, flirty, stimulating, sweet, and beautifully performed. It's not syrupy, dumbed-down, or played on electronic instruments like some of those other compilations. We listen to it all the time. I now buy this as a baby shower gift for everyone I know!
Bach and Roll!.......2004-04-26
You can't beat Bach. If classical music is the thing you want for your baby, get this CD. If you are single and have no kids, but classical music is your thing, get this CD. This is fantastic reading music, study music (regardless of what you're studying), and just plain relaxing music. I also highly recommend the CD, BUILD YOUR BABY'S BRAIN 1.
My daughter loves this CD.......2003-02-24
She's one-year-old now, and she's been listening to this CD since she was 1 month old. Recommend it for those new parents that can't come up with any other way to lay their little ones to sleep.
Soothing.......2002-07-29
Very soothing. Calms my baby everytime I play it! And yes, they actually do listen to music and enjoy it! I recommend this as an essential item for any new baby!
Classical, Jazz and Opera Bach all in one.......2001-05-30
This is a versatile collection in terms of composition, performance and layout. Comparing to most of CD with classical selections for baby, this edition is more nutritious and rich on musical experience. Genre wise, the piano solo, concerti, chamber and opera are all included. Performance wise, it is absolute a feast -- Sir Neville Marrier conducting Academy of St. Martin-in-the fields, Jazz Pianist John Lewis delivering the charming and uplifting variation, and Kiri Te Kanawa's heavenly creamy voice. The combination of these musicians and recordings is a decision with great artistic sensibility. The layout is perfectly arranged -- from the waking up, playtime and to the bed. This is not just another CD juggles some pieces together from a brandy composer. For a more serious editing of baby music, this shall be something as a guideline.
Average customer rating:
- Great But Not The Greatest
- On the Lizst piano sonata
- To unbalance for rebalance!
- Consummate Mastery In The Liszt Concertos
- The best CD of Liszt's major piano works
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Liszt: The Two Piano Concertos; The Piano Sonata
Franz Liszt , Kiril Kondrashin , London Symphony Orchestra , and Sviatoslav Richter
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- Liszt: 10 Hungarian Rhapsodies
- Brahms: Concertos for Piano No. 1 & 2, Fantasia Op. 116
- Mendelssohn: Piano Concertos
- Rachmaninov, Tchaikovsky: Piano Concertos / Richter
- Schumann: Piano Concerto / Sviatoslav Richter
ASIN: B0000041C4
Release Date: 1995-07-18 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E flat: 1. Allegro maestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E flat: 2. Quasi adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E flat: 3. Allegretto vivace - Allegro animato
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E flat: 4. Allegro marziale animato
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In A: Adagio sostenuto assai - Allegro agitato assai
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In A: Allegro moderato
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In A: Allegro deciso - Marziale un poco meno allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In A: Allegro animato
- Sonata In B Minor: Lento assai - Allegro energico
- Sonata In B Minor: Andante sostenuto
- Sonata In B Minor: Allegro energico - Andante sostenuto - Lento assai
Amazon.com
Since they were first issued, Sviatoslov Richter's Liszt Piano Concertos have been widely admired as the finest performances available, and for most listeners they still are. Now they have been remastered by none other than Wilma Cozart Fine, Mercury Living Presence's goddess of the sound console, and they have come up sounding better than ever. To make matters even more exciting, you also get Richter's well-nigh definitive performance of the massive Sonata in B Minor--and all for only mid-price! Even if you hate Liszt, hate concertos, hate pianos, hate Russians, hate music in general, you should own and treasure (or punish yourself regularly) with this recording. --David Hurwitz
Amazon.com
Although Sviatoslav Richter's account has power and authority, it's best in the meditative moments, which are almost balletic in their grace. The Russian pianist achieves seamless transitions from one mood to the next, and his countryman on the podium sees to it that there is a wonderful dovetailing of the accompaniment around the solo. Richter is especially magical at the end of the Adagio, where he anticipates the shadings of Liszt's late style. This was originally a Mercury "Living Presence" recording; it has been tellingly remastered by its original producer, and sounds remarkably more vivid than when Philips first issued it on CD. --Ted Libbey
Customer Reviews:
Great But Not The Greatest.......2007-06-14
Of course, as great pianists go, Richter is perhaps the best all-rounder, and like many a pianophile I probably have more recordings by him than by any other single pianist. Nevertheless, there is greater refinement and daring in Byron Janis's Mercury Living Presence recording of the Liszt concertos. Much as I also like serious and probing accounts of the Liszt sonata and so would not part with Arrau on Philips (coupled with a fine Vallee d'Obermann and a superb Benediction), it is difficult to return to him or indeed to Richter once you have encountered Martha Argerich's astonishing recording of the sonata on her Debut Recital compilation on DG. Richter's only fault was that he could occasionally take too firm an approach to a piece just as Michelangeli could sometimes seem to be too aloof. Richter's virtuosity could be astonishing (the Mendelssohn Variations serieuses appended to the Richter/Rostropovich DVD of the complete Beethoven cello sonatas, the Chopin Etude Op10 No4 on the Bruno Monsiagneon DVD, and Debussy's L'Isle joyeuse on BBC Legends) - and his poetry could be just as breathtaking (the Chopin Ballade No3 on the same BBC CD set) - but sometimes Richter could also go over the top and allow his ferocious virtuosity to squeeze the poetry out of a piece. Neither the Liszt concerto recordings nor the sonata are cases of this approach, but nor are they Richter at his most completely inspired - and for my money the Janis and Argerich recordings are superior for the COMBINATION of virtuosity and poetry. Byron and Martha rule on this occasion!
On the Lizst piano sonata.......2007-02-28
Might I mention one performance that Jeffrey Lipscomb omits - that recorded live in Budapest 1960. It was issued as a Phillips Legendary Classics CD, 422 137-2. The cd is a sort of twin to the 1958 Sofia Concert but has always been very much harder to find. This is my favorite of the recordings I know.
There is also a performance in the Chopin/Liszt box from the Authorised Recordings collection, Phillips again, 438 620-2. The minimal information claims it was recorded in 1988 but I believe it is the Livorno 1966 version.
To unbalance for rebalance! .......2006-08-23
It's far to be a mere casualty, the fact Richter and Francois have become the most important performers in which concern the major achievement of Franz Liszt `s Piano Concertos. Both pianists have some similarities, first and foremost, they possessed a nonchalant respect for the objective rules of interpretation so frequently watched until the 60's. Additionally, they created atmospheres every time they played and the glorious musical intuition, logic consequence of that irreverent posture before the rational way of playing the piano, permitted them to discover and explore new horizons around these well known and many times neglected works. They caught the entire attention of the public, because the Dionysian spirit made they considered these Op. as transient works between an agonic Romanticism and an emerging musical Impressionist. That explains why composers such Bartok, Respighi or Reger decided to undertake new musical paths.
The main difference between Richter, Francois and the rest is they illuminated and explored new facets of the score. Go for this unavoidable album an then you will agree with me.
The performance of the Sonata in B minor is mesmerizing.
Consummate Mastery In The Liszt Concertos.......2005-04-25
If you are new to the late Russian pianist Sviatoslav Richter, arguably the greatest all-round keyboard virtuoso of the last century, this is a splendid place to start. And if you are new to Liszt's piano concertos, there is little need to look any farther. Few "legendary" recordings live up to the praise heaped upon them so deservedly as these classic 1961 studio recordings. Richter's inspired blend of drama and poetry is matched by a superb accompaniment from Kondrashin and the London Symphony. Philips here has actually improved on the sound of the original LPs: only a trace of hiss betrays the fact that these performances were taped over four decades ago.
However, for Richter collectors, the situation is a little more complicated. These concertos are sensibly coupled with a "live" 1966 concert reading (from Livorno) of Liszt's Piano Sonata. Recently, Philips has re-issued these same concertos (minus the Liszt Sonata) in a coupling with three Beethoven sonatas (#10, 19 & 20). The sound on the newer disc is SLIGHTLY better than what is heard on this less expensive CD. Of course, Richter completists will want to have both.
Further complicating the situation, BBC Legends has issued the "live" 1961 Richter/Kondrashin concerto accounts (Royal Albert Hall, London) that preceded these studio recordings. While I generally prefer the "spontaneity" of actual concert performances, I think the studio accounts here are a little better realized and have superior sound. But again, the compleat Richterphile will need to own both: the BBC CD also has a "live" Liszt Hungarian Fantasia and Chopin's "Andante Spianato & Grande Polonaise." The Chopin is a personal favorite, along with the Czerny-Stefanska/Smetacek version on Supraphon (see my review). So, in short, I own both Philips releases as well as the BBC concert CD.
That brings us back to the Liszt Sonata, which Richter never recorded in the studio. This 1966 account is one of four "live" recordings by Richter (all of which have some wrong notes). It's superior to the 1965 Aldeburgh (Classica d'Oro), which is very messy and rushed, and about on a par with the 1965 Moscow (Brilliant Classics). All in all, it's a rather analytical reading, and I would rank it just behind historic recordings by Simon Barere (mine's on Turnabout LP) and Ernst Levy (on a wonderful Marston CD that includes a great account of Beethoven's "Hammerklavier" Sonata).
Unfortunately, Richter's GREATEST account of the Liszt Sonata is the only one that is currently un-available: a stupendously well-controlled, supremely poetic 18 May 1965 concert performance from Carnegie Hall. This was first issued on a rare LP (Private Edition P-101, apparently the only record issued by that label). I bought a copy in Manhattan back around 1974 for $20 - a princely sum in those days for a sole LP (adjusted for inflation, it's likely the most I have ever paid for a single disc). It also included the most awesomely well-played Mendelssohn "Variations Serieuses" I have ever heard (22 April 1965, Brooklyn), plus Richter's finest version of Beethoven's Op. 101 Sonata (3 May 1965, Carnegie Hall). This stunning Liszt Sonata was briefly available on a "Legendary Pianists" CD (Philips 422137, now deleted).
So, to summarize: 1) This Philips disc contains the greatest studio accounts of Liszt's piano concertos known to me, 2) You may want to supplement it with Richter's "live" BBC accounts, and 3) Hopefully, Philips will re-issue that fabulous "live" 1965 Liszt Sonata from Carnegie Hall. The latter is the greatest account of the Liszt Sonata I have ever heard, and just possibly Richter's greatest-ever recording, period. Philips, are you listening? [Nov. 2005 update: the 1965 Carnegie Hall reading of the Liszt Sonata has recently been re-issued on a Palexa CD, which is available here at Amazon]
Highly recommended.
The best CD of Liszt's major piano works.......2004-10-22
Franz Liszt had written an enomous piano works, including Rhapsodies, Waltzes, Préludes, Annees de Pelerinage, Etudes, Transcriptions, Symphonic Poems... And the number of works goes to the thousands. But he just wrote two concertos and one sonata. I believe they are some of most beautiful concertos and sonatas in classical.
When talk about Liszt, people often think about V. Horowitz, J. Bolet, E. Szegedi, or G. Cziffra. Even some famous pianists said "Noone can't play Liszt like Horowitz". It could be true, but not with these concertos and sonata. Richter had made a legendary record with outstanding technique. Comparing to Argerich, Cziffra in concertos and Horowitz in sonata in B, Richter played more dramatically and gently. Especially in concerto N. 1, Adagios, every notes like drops of crystal. Performed with Kiril Kondrashin and London Symphony Orchestra, this is a must have CD in your collection. Another CD of Liszt's concertos you could consider is Boris Berezovsky - Liszt concerto and sonata in B (Leonskaya). Boris Berezovsky is a young pianist (1969) with briliant talen and won Tchaikovsky competition in 1990.
Moreover, there are many valuable albums of Richter you can find if you want to explore more about this pianist, like Richter in Prague, Rediscovery - with Prokofiev's sonata No. 6 played in Carnegie Hall, Schumann's works...
Average customer rating:
- Beethoven would have smiled
- The Definitive Performances of Beethoven's Cello-Piano
- Wonderful
- Richter + Rostropovich = Perfection
- Gramophone Classical 100
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Beethoven: Complete Music for Cello & Piano
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Similar Items:
- Brahms: The Cello Sonatas
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- Brahms: Sonatas for Cello and Piano
ASIN: B0000041A9
Release Date: 1994-10-11 |
Tracks:
- Sonata No. 1 In F, Op. 5 No. 1, For Piano And Cello: I. Adagio Sostenuto - Allegro
- Sonata No. 1 In F, Op. 5 No. 1, For Piano And Cello: II. Rondo. Allegro Vivace
- Sonata No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 5 No. 2, For Piano And Cello: I. Adagio Sostenuto
- Sonata No. 2 In G Minor, Op. 5 No. 2, For Piano And Cello: II. Rondo. Allegro
- Sonata No. 3 In A, Op. 69, For Piano And Cello: I. Allegro ma non tanto
- Sonata No. 3 In A, Op. 69, For Piano And Cello: II. Scherzo. Allegro molto
- Sonata No. 3 In A, Op. 69, For Piano And Cello: III. Adagio cantabile - Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- Sonata No. 4 In C, Op. 102 No. 1, For Piano And Cello: I. Adagio - Allegro Vivace
- Sonata No. 4 In C, Op. 102 No. 1, For Piano And Cello: II. Adagio - Tempo D'Andante - Allegro Vivace
- Sonata No. 5 In D, Op. 102 No. 2, For Piano And Cello: I. Allegro Con Brio
- Sonata No. 5 In D, Op. 102 No. 2, For Piano And Cello: II. Adagio Con Molto Sentimento D'Affetto
- Sonata No. 5 In D, Op. 102 No. 2, For Piano And Cello: III. Allegro - Allegro Fugato
- 12 Variations On Ein Madchen Oder Weibchen
- 7 Variations On Bei Mannern, Welche Liebe Fuhlen
- 12 Variations On See The Conquering Hero Comes
Amazon.com
Beethoven was the first great composer of cello sonatas, and he remained really the only one until Brahms wrote two at the end of the last century, and then in our own time Martinu wrote three. Aside from a few individual works by other composers (Grieg, Rachmaninov, Shostakovich, Barber, and Britten), that about sums up the entire repertoire for this particular combination. It's a difficult medium, because the low notes of the cello tend to get covered by the bass of the piano, and balance between the two instruments is always precarious. Of course, when you have artists of the caliber of Rostropovich and Richter, there's nothing to worry about. This classic set has been the reference edition since the day it was issued, and it's now available at a budget price. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
Beethoven would have smiled.......2007-02-09
Rostroprovich and Richter are poster children for the merits of recording the lesser-known works of past masters. It is astonishing to believe that the Beethoven of, say, Symphonies, 3, 7, and 9 also sat himself down to compose small music like these pieces for two amiable but sometimes socially incompatible instruments.
That he did so is testimony to the range of his genius, a profound gift that we are prone to appreciate only for its depth.
The phrasing and coordination that the two R's bring to this ensemble makes the two instruments play almost as one.
Beethoven would have sat back in his chair, closed his eyes, and allowed himself the hint of an avuncular smile as though to say 'Now *this* is what I had in mind ... !'
The Definitive Performances of Beethoven's Cello-Piano .......2005-10-10
I've enjoyed this recording for years. In the Sonatas, Rostropovich's cello is strong and the difficulty of having the cello and the piano together is remedied wholly by Richter's capable, modulated keyboarding. I especially love the second movement (Rondo) of Sonata No. 2 in G minor. (I suspect that the recording engineers also played their part.) The Sonatas sound as though they were recorded in a large, empty hall. Perfect.
Yet nothing can be taken from Gendron's cello performances in the Variations. Amazing depths in Variations on "Bei Mannern, welche Liebe fuhlen"! (He's also performed quite a bit of Bach out there.) Jean Francaix is the pianist in these performances and I especially enjoyed his parts in 12 Variations on "Ein Madchen oder Weibchen" based on Mozart. The Variations have more of a "chamber" feel as recorded.
In short, turn off all distractions, grab your favorite soothing beverage, lower the lights, and let this recording ease what ails you.
Wonderful.......2005-03-24
Beethoven, Rostropovich, and Richter. It is simply amazing how they managed to get Rostropovich and Richter, two GIANTS of the cello and piano worlds, to play some of the greatest music together. And this set of cello and piano music is complete! What more could you ask for? Sure, the sound isn't perfect, but it's barely noticeable, and you get used to it.
Richter + Rostropovich = Perfection.......2004-07-06
Simply put: The best set of Beethoven's Violoncello Sonatas you'll be able to find. Period.
Gramophone Classical 100.......2004-01-05
This should have entered into Gramophone Classical 100. What were the reviewers doing? Sleeping?
Average customer rating:
- The definitive "Pictures at an Exhibition"
- terrible coughs.
- The Most Memorialand Quoted Piano Recital from the 1950's
- The best interpretation of "Pictures at an Exhibition" I have heard
- Great but the worst recording i hear
|
The Sofia Recital 1958
Manufacturer: Polygram Records
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ASIN: B0000523QI
Release Date: 2001-03-13 |
Tracks:
- Pictures At An Exhibition: Promenade
- Pictures At An Exhibition: I Gnomus
- Pictures At An Exhibition: Promenade
- Pictures At An Exhibition: II II vecchio castello - Promenade
- Pictures At An Exhibition: III Tuileries
- Pictures At An Exhibition: IV Bydlo
- Pictures At An Exhibition: Promenade
- Pictures At An Exhibition: Ballet des poussins dans leurs coques
- Pictures At An Exhibition: VI Samuel Goldenberg und Schmuyle
- Pictures At An Exhibition: Promenade
- Pictures At An Exhibition: VII Limoges: le marche'
- Pictures At An Exhibition: VIII Catacombae: Sepulchrum romanum - Cum mortius in lingua mortua
- Pictures At An Exhibition: La Cabe sur des pattes de poule
- Pictures At An Exhibition: La Grande Porte de Kiev
- Moment Musical in C Major, D780 no.1
- Impromptu In E Flat Major, D899 No,2
- Impromptu in A Flat Major
- Etude In E Major, Op.10 no.3
- Valse oubliee No.1 In F Sharp Major
- Valse oubliee No.2 In A Flat Major
- Etude d'execution transcendante No.5
- Etude d'execution transcendante No.11
- Prelude In G Sharp Minor, op.32 no.13
Customer Reviews:
The definitive "Pictures at an Exhibition".......2007-04-30
Not much more I can add to this. If you have any interest in the original piano version of "Pictures" at all then this is the one to get. Try Muti's for an excellent version of the piece as orchestrated by Ravel(Along with a great "Rite of Spring"; dirt cheap too)- Mussorgsky: Pictures at an Exhibiton; Stravinsky: The Rite of Spring.
Nobody else understands "Pictures" as well as Richter and in his hands time melts and you are taken on a journey you will not soon forget. Richter pushes and pulls this piece wherever he wants and we the listeners are happy to follow him where he chooses to take us.
The piano sound is quite good for its time. Fairly full and with a good dynamic range. Unfortunately the audience seems to have a case of infectious coughing. Similar to the live Wartime recordings of Furtwangler in that respect. You get used to it though, and either way it doesn't matter in the hands of a performance of this stature.
There's a reason that you can still buy this nearly 50(?!) years after it was recorded. Not only are people still talking about this recital, but we are still waiting for a recording to match it in modern sound without audience interruptions. I suspect we may have to wait a long, long time.
terrible coughs........2006-11-16
there are two recordings that would've perhaps been much more appreciated had there not been several people who coughed their way through the entire concert. the furtwangler 1942 recording of Beethoven's sixth symphony and this one.
jesus. i'm not one to complain about coughing, but we have issues here. was it communism?? really, were russians this worse off???????
things set aside, the performance itself.. is magical.
i can't add much more to previous reviewers except this: expect one of the worst recordings from the 1950's... if you brainwash yourself into believing this is one of those naxos or pearl remastered 1920s recordings, you'll find yourself much more pleased.
The Most Memorialand Quoted Piano Recital from the 1950's .......2005-12-15
Svaitoslav Richter is the quintiessential pianist of the 20th century. This epic live recording of the Mussorsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition" stands as the supreme recording of the piano version ever recorded. Although some will argue that Horowitz recorded of his this piece with is its numerous interpretative changes is also notable but is mearly a flashey more superficial rendition than Richter's. Richter here captures this pieces mistical and heavenly appeal so perfectly it seems its nuances are forever engrained in your mind. The Promenade is so stately and energetically expressed it seemingly gives us permission to enter a heavenly 30 minute musical forum. The variation number 5, 8, 10 and the next to last are my favorites. Being a pianist (and I use that term loosely) this recording has taught me so much with regards to vivid imagery. For example the next to last variation leaves me with the impression that it is someone taking the road to heaven and finally arrives at its gates. Then is looking at the Gates of Heaven as they Open. A grand moment in any life. Richters imagery is so perfectly unbalanced that he leaves us on edge to anticipate each colorful moment. This is truely my favorite recording in classical piano because it is so awe inspiring.
The best interpretation of "Pictures at an Exhibition" I have heard.......2005-11-17
Wow.
If the vivid imagery Richter creates in this live performance isn't enough to bring tears to your eyes, the technical prowess will certainly send you searching for the "repeat" button on your cd player.
Richter, as always, delivers an emotional and monumental performance.
Great but the worst recording i hear.......2005-10-01
fisrt of all excuse me for my bad englih, i m french ;o)
A concert recording can't be perfect, this is the worst i hear. All the people are ill and the record man was probably far as 50m of the piano behind a door.
So, Why three stars ?
because i love this music and nobody play it as Richter this day.
Great music, Great moment...
Average customer rating:
- Bach for Relaxation
- Peaceful and Beautiful
- Bach to knit up your raveled sleeve of care
- My favorite...
- Wonderful for baby!
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Bach for Relaxation
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ASIN: B000003G7C
Release Date: 1998-01-13 |
Tracks:
- Jesu, Joy Of Man's Desiring
- Suite BWV1012: Allemande
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 6: Adagio ma non tanto
- The Well Tempered Clavier, Book 1: Prelude In C
- Trio Sonata No. 4, BWV1079: Andante
- Violino solo e Basso l'accompagnato
- Sonata BWV1005: Largo
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 4: Andante
- Violin Concerto BWV1041: Andante
- Flute Sonata BWV1034: Andante
- The Goldberg Variations: Aria
- Lute Suite No. 1 BWV996: Courante
- Sonata No. 1 For Violin And Harpsichord BWV1014: Andante
- The Well Tempered Clavier, Book 1: Prelude In E - Flat Minor (excerpt)
- Concerto For Flute, Violin, And Harpsicord BMV 1044: Adagio
- Brandenburg Concerto No. 2: Andante
- Sonata BWV1001: Siciliano
- Prelude In D Minor BWV999
- Orchestral Suite No. 3 BWV1068: Air On The G-String
Customer Reviews:
Bach for Relaxation.......2007-03-09
This is a great CD of instrumental Bach music. I listen to it very often
Peaceful and Beautiful.......2002-11-01
I have purchased this CD twice, first for myself to listen to during labor and secondly for a friend who has a new, very stressful job. I love the music on this CD, it is wonderfully played and listening it to it during labor was very helpful and uplifting. Now both my daughter and I enjoy listening to it, and during fussy days it calms her down a bit, which is very nice. The music truly brings on a serene feeling without making one sleepy, which means its great for anytime you just need to relax yet stay alert. I'll be giving it to my friend for the holidays, and I'm sure she'll love it as much as we do.
Bach to knit up your raveled sleeve of care.......2001-12-19
What better way to begin 'Bach for Relaxation' than with "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." This CD is not dumbed-down Johann Sebastian Bach just because it advertises itself as relaxation music (which was my initial fear before purchase). Good orchestras and soloists perform the nineteen well-chosen chamber works, ranging from the deceptively simple "Prelude in C" from "The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book 1" (Sviatoslav Richter, piano) to selections from the powerful Brandenburg Concertos.
This is Bach in his most serene, mathematically perfect form. None of his mighty organ or choral works will disturb your contemplative mood as you drift through the sixty-eight minutes of this CD.
I'm usually asleep by track fifteen, the adagio from "Concerto for Flute, Violin & Harpsichord BWV 1044."
Another very good CD in this 'relaxation' series from BMG RCAVictor is "Cello for Relaxation."
My favorite..........2000-11-21
This is one of my favorite classical CD's. It is a composition of soft, calmer Bach, and is perfect for almost any occassion. This is a great CD for first time classical listeners or long time fans ... It functions as perfect dinner background music, or to listen to alone. I highly recommend this compilation of Bach.
Wonderful for baby!.......1999-12-04
We received this as a baby gift and it has been a godsend. Our newborn relaxes to the sound of this when nothing else works. We also love it for ourselves; the CD contains the best of Bach's less fiery works, and the musical interpretation and recording quality are outstanding.
Average customer rating:
- Great performance, poor remastering
- Eloquence with hands of steel and a heart of fire
- A performance that will live as long as recorded music
- Idyosincratic Tchaikovsky , enigmatic Rachmaninov!
- POWER
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Rachmaninov, Tchaikovsky: Piano Concertos / Richter
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Similar Items:
- Schumann: Piano Concerto / Sviatoslav Richter
- Brahms: Concerto No.2/Beethoven: Sonata No.23
- Liszt: The Two Piano Concertos; The Piano Sonata
- The Sofia Recital 1958
- Rachmaninoff: Concerto No. 3 in D minor, Op. 30 / Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 23
ASIN: B000001GQD
Release Date: 1996-02-13 |
Tracks:
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2 in C Minor: 1. Moderato
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2 in C Minor: 2. Adagio sostenuto
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2 in C Minor: 3. Allegro scherzando
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in B Flat Minor: 1. Allegro non troppo e molto maestoso - Allegro con spirito
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in B Flat Minor: 2. Andantino semplice - Prestissimo -Tempo I
- Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 1 in B Flat Minor: 3. Allegro con fuoco
Amazon.com essential recording
Although the late Sviatoslav Richter spent his later years concentrating on Bach, Beethoven, and Haydn, he never completely abandoned the music of his native country. His reading of Rachmaninov's most popular concerto, captured in fine late-'50s stereo, is one of the most glorious ever recorded. Richter's amazing technique is completely up to the demands of Rachmaninov's difficult writing, and he plays the heart-on-sleeve melodies with such refined intensity that they never sound sentimental. This performance is a truly amazing example of great pianism, very strongly supported by the fine orchestra and its little-known conductor. Unfortunately, the accompanying Tchaikovsky is a dud. Karajan and Richter recorded this work together as a favor to a record-company executive, but they don't seem to be in sympathy. The conductor's excessive refinement holds the pianist back, and the result is much too restrained for the music. Never mind. The Rachmaninov alone is easily worth the price of this disc. --Leslie Gerber
Customer Reviews:
Great performance, poor remastering.......2007-02-19
Previous reviews extoll the virtues of Richter's performance, and indeed it is magnificent. Unfortunately, the remastering of this recording did not produce a quality result. The dynamics are poor, resulting in fuzzy strings, and horns and a less than vibrant sound from Richter's piano. There is no sense of "presence". This is a valuable recording for those with two or more copies of the Rach 2, who want this one as a historic performance or for collectors of Richter. If this is your first copy and you have a decent sound system, steer clear.
Eloquence with hands of steel and a heart of fire.......2006-07-09
Richter's work has long been a benchmark in the library of piano virtuosity, but in these two selections, he has transcended normal experience. For an artist to insert himself into the world of music on such a grand scale is to take great risks, and that is exactly what he has done. I believe that at a point, Richter and the music become one and the same. It is as though he were fused to each note. The result is a performance that is both flawless and yet, warm, sonorous and full. There is nothing that he has left out. He is an artist for the ages, and we are richer for his presence at the keyboard.
A performance that will live as long as recorded music.......2006-01-19
There is nearly unanimous consensus that Richter's 1959 recording of the Rachmaninov 2nd rises to a height challenged only by the composer himself. Richter's ability to play the fastest passagework while moving from soft to loud and back again is breathtaking--speed doesn't change his control over dynamics one bit. But that's to pick out a single aspect of a performance that is by turns noble, lyrical, passionate, and poetic. One could spend the whole performance marveling just at the independence of Richter's two hands. He rescues this thrice-familiar work from its fulsome reputation. Rowicki conducts well, but the recorded sound is thin, and the Warsaw Phil. decidedly provincial. None of which matters a bit.
Reviewers here echo the Amazon critic in disparaging the Tchaikovsky First from 1963, although it is in better sound than the Rchmaninov and played better by the orchestra, too--Karajan had a special relationship with the Vienna Sym., a sorry ensemble under most conductors. I like this performance a great deal. Richter isn't highly individual--he plays for strength and dignity in the first movement, not for Horowitz's burn-down-the-house virtuosity, and in the last movement he applies restrained delicacy. Since the Tchaikovsky First is the deadest of dead horses to me, I liked hearing such thoughtful musicality. As for Richter and Karajan being on different pages, they sound together to me. Taste, what can you say? Five stars for both performances.
Idyosincratic Tchaikovsky , enigmatic Rachmaninov!.......2004-08-17
The Tchaikovsky piano concerto was approached for Richter as a imperial concert and not as a simple introspective and romantic work .
This idea is extremely remarkable since you muts notice the fact the three first symphonies are deeply imperials , epic and surrounded for the epic majesty and russian pride .
But since the four till the sixth , the conception changes completely . We see the man and his inner sorrows and his fears.
In this sense the most of the western pianist play Tchaikovsky , as the wounded man tired due his personal tragedy .
Richter turns around the clock and reveals Tchaikovsky with the same spirit that we know in his first Symphny , radian and filled with vitality and fierce.
The slow tempo does not mean a rendition but a clever statement about a transition between the youth and the mature age . Karajan in this sense did not make any special contributtion in this case . He respected Richter and knew about his special rapport for Tchaikovsky . I mean you will feel the required histamina in the last bars but as a natural consequence of the musical language and not a simple firework exercise.
In the case of Rachmaninov , Richter keeps the romantic mood , and he avoids the excesive self indulgence so typical of Rachmaninov .
The emphasis turns around another levels , such as the epic nosthalgy for the land he will never see again and obviosuly the hidden homagge to his beloved friend the hypnotist doctor Dahl who rescued him from the alcohol hell .
Rowicki was one of the best polish conductors in any age . He understood perfectly this rapture feeling and the key was simply overwhelming .
Fundamental issue in your personal collection.
POWER.......2004-05-20
Richter's performance on this cd reminds me very much of Rush's 2112 album. You are captivated from the moment you hit play, and you are taken on a journey. But by the end, you realize that every time you will pay it another visit, you will discover a whole new world of aesthetics that you had no prior perception of. Not just compositionally, but the same goes for what Richter's soul has to say. It's like getting two stories in one! This may initially sound ironic, given that his devilishly careful, almost brooding pacing, finds many listeners opting for Ashkenazy's spin. However, for me, the more thoughtful ... a performance is, the more intricacies there are to be found. When you listen to Rush, you barely get anything from the first listen... but you just KNOW that there IS an eternity of SOMETHING to be gathered, if you listen over and over again. So, in either case, you become strangely obsessed and fixated, drawn to listen just one more time. I suppose to really go out there, I will compare Richter to an artistic bag of potato chips. You must just keep going. That's not to say you get nothing from the first listen! Indeed, those familiar with the concerto and/or Richter will be blown away, regardless. But with every chord of the 1st movement of the Rach 2nd, you sense a world of unspoken stories, meaning, content! Warning, though - if you don't like being analytical, this isn't the recording for you. People complain of orchestral faults, injections of political issues, etc. etc.... but what captivates me every time I listen to Richter, is how superb he is at upping the ante for the utopian combination of brains and emotion. ... The same is to be said for the Tchaikovsky. Whatever stressors surround the nature of the recording, a true musician puts it all aside (OR uses it as fuel to the fire!) and performs a miracle at the piano. If you are openminded, buy this - you won't be disappointed. Rather,... you'll become addicted.
Average customer rating:
- The very best performance of WTC
- Sound Quality Problems
- A little more about the sound
- Richter gives great WTC but not on this recording
- It's Bach and Richter, but the recording quality....
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Bach: Well-Tempered Clavier
Johann Sebastian Bach , and Sviatoslav Richter
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Similar Items:
- Bach: The Art of Fugue
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ASIN: B000026OHN
Release Date: 1992-01-06 |
Tracks:
- Prelude & Fugue I BWV 846 In C Major
- Prelude & Fugue II BWV 847 In C Minor
- Prelude & Fugue III BWV 848 In C Sharp Major
- Prelude & Fugue IV BWV 849 In C Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue V BWV 850 In D Major
- Prelude & Fugue VI BWV 851 In D Minor
- Prelude & Fugue VII BWV 852 In E Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue VIII BWV 853 In E Flat Minor
- Prelude & Fugue IX BWV 854 In E Major
- Prelude & Fugue X BWV 855 In E Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XI BWV 856 In F Major
- Prelude & Fugue XII BWV 857 In F Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XIII BWV 858 In F Sharp Major
- Prelude & Fugue XIV BWV 859 In F Sharp Minor
Tracks:
- Prelude & Fugue XV BWV 860 In G Major
- Prelude & Fugue XVI BWV 861 In G Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XVII BWV 862 In A Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue XVIII In G Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XIX BWV In A Major
- Prelude & Fugue XX BWV 865 In A Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XXI BWV 866 In B Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue XXII BWV 867 In B Flat Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XXIII BWV 868 In Major
- Prelude & Fugue XXIV BWV 869 In B Minor
Tracks:
- Prelude & Fugue I BWV 870 In C Major
- Prelude & Fugue II BWV 871 In C Minor
- Prelude & Fugue III BWV 872 In C Sharp Major
- Prelude & Fugue IV BWV 873 In C Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue V BWV 874 In D Major
- Prelude & Fugue VI BWV 875 In D Minor
- Prelude & Fugue BWV 876 In E Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue VIII BWV 877 In D Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue IX BWV 878 In E Major
- Prelude & Fugue X BWV 879 In E Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XI BWV 880 In F Major
- Prelude & Fugue XII BWV 881 In F Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XIII In F Sharp
Tracks:
- Prelude & Fugue XIV BWV 883 In F Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XV In G Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XVI BWV 885 In G Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XVII BWV 886 In A Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue XVIII BWV 887 In G Sharp Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XIX BWV 888 In A Major
- Prelude & Fugue XX BWV 889 In A Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XXI BWV 890 In B Flat Major
- Prelude & Fugue XXII BWV 891 In B Flat Minor
- Prelude & Fugue XXIII BWV 892 In B Major
- Prelude & Fugue XXIV BWV 893 In B Minor
Customer Reviews:
The very best performance of WTC.......2007-03-16
Having listening to more than a dozen recordings of WTC played with piano,
I have to say Richter's rendition is one of the few I love best. Technical virtuosity, melodic fluency, contrapuntal precision, and musical depth are perfectly combined here. Even the tempos could not be better handled. The only thing I find not so good about this rendition is that Richter seems to have used too much petal, making the sound blurring at times. Even so, I stronly recommend this recording on grounds of its artistic value and relevation.
Sound Quality Problems.......2007-01-31
1-I can barely hear the left hand, which is supposed to be central to counterpoint, fugues...etc
2-I can barely hear the preludes as they sound distant and the piano sound is very thin, and suddenly you hear the fugues very powerfull [...].
3- at times, I could hear a sound coming from the piano that is similar to that sound you get when you hit a piece of glass with a metal spoon!
[...]
Thank you.
A little more about the sound.......2006-11-24
Not being an "audiophilic" sophisticate I can hardly delve into details of this recording's sound reproduction, but it is not nearly as bad as to make this great performance un-listenable. Quite the opposite, the peculiarities of the sound have deeper reasons behind them. Bach wrote WTK for the keyboard, but in his mind he must have heard them played on a particular instrument. If Gould (whose WTK, IMHO, is his weakest Bach recording) plays it like a harpsichord, or Schiff (another dud) - like fortepiano, every note of Richter's performance echoes with the sound of an organ. I am certain it was deliberate on Richter's part, and the fact that the selected venue of the recording was a church, only confirms that notion. Of course, the church's acoustics did affect the sound, but in a way that was consistent with the artist's conception.
As far as the playing itself, there is not much I can add to what has been written by the previous reviewers. Book II, which is somewhat more "abstract" portion of the WTK-48, receives great treatment here, but it is Richter's performance of Book I that stands like a solitary granite peak, high above the clouds, projecting mysterious and purifying force.
Richter gives great WTC but not on this recording.......2006-10-26
Sviatoslav Richter brings his superb technique and penetrating musical intelligence to bear on the WTC and the result may not please scholars but it is deeply enjoyable (which is probably what Bach had in mind). Unfortunately the sound on these recordings is abominable. After listening for more than a couple of minutes I give up. I think it is the fault of the original recording in an over reverberant acoustic but there is a constant "aura" which really gets in the way. There is a far better and consistently more exciting version recorded in Innsbruck in the early 70s but it is only available in a CD version on "Polo" which is published in China. Presumably RCA Victor has problems with the dissemination of this version in the West! It's not a perfect recording by any means but it is far more listenable.
It's Bach and Richter, but the recording quality...........2006-09-30
I love this music and Sviatoslav Richter is one of my favorite classical artists, but the quality of this recording is horrible and is so bad that the quality of both the performance (excellent!) or of the works themselves (wonderful!) can not be overcome by the quality of the sound.
Average customer rating:
- Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 5 / Sviatoslav Richter
- Concerto Not Quite Perfect
- Prokofiev and Richter's pianistic magic
- Definitive Eighth
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Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 5 / Sviatoslav Richter
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
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Similar Items:
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ASIN: B000001GXD
Release Date: 1997-06-10 |
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 5 In G Major: 1. Allegro con brio
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 5 In G Major: 2. Moderato ben accentuato
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 5 In G Major: 3. Toccata - Allegro con fuoco (piu presto che la prima volta)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 5 In G Major: 4. Larghetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No. 5 In G Major: 5. Vivo
- Sonata For Piano No. 8 In B Flat Major: 1. Andante dolce - Allegro moderato - Andante
- Sonata For Piano No. 8 In B Flat Major: 2. Andante songando
- Sonata For Piano No. 8 In B Flat Major: 3. Vivace - Allegro ben marcato - Andantino - Vivace
- Visions fugitives op.22: No. 3, No. 6, No. 9
Amazon.com essential recording
Sviatoslov Richter was a friend of the composer, and he played all of this music in Prokofiev's presence. His performances have since acquired almost cult status among pianists--a reputation they richly deserve. The Fifth Piano Concerto is a pithy, technically difficult work in five short movements, which Richter plays as though he had composed them himself. The Eighth Sonata, by contrast, was composed during the Second World War, and the contrast between simple lyricism and horrifying violence leaves no doubt whatsoever as to what the composer was attempting to describe. These mid-price reissues sound better than ever, and artistically speaking, they are priceless. --David Hurwitz
Customer Reviews:
Prokofiev: Piano Concerto No. 5 / Sviatoslav Richter.......2006-08-31
excellent recording. prompt service frm amazon
Concerto Not Quite Perfect.......2006-03-11
Don't get me wrong these performances, esp. the ones forom the keyboard have all of the energy, stength and heart that you would expect from Richter. I can not find one fault with his playing here. It is the recording itself that I have an issue with. The recording balance in the concerto is way off. The piano is always (incorrectly) projected as being louder than the orchestra. If you've ever been to a paiano concerto concert, you know that this is simply not true. Therefore, I give it 4 stars.
Prokofiev and Richter's pianistic magic.......2002-11-23
Prokofiev considered his 5th Piano Concerto to be unjustly neglected at the expense of his ever-popular 3rd. On the evidence of this September 1958 recording, he was right! Richter and the Warsaw National Philharmonic are flawless and sparkling with the spirit of Prokofiev, a light, urbane wit seldom heard since Mozart. The 8th Sonata is another spirit entirely, perhaps Prokofiev's most profound and complex work. There are gentle passages following turbulence and darkness that are of the utmost beauty, and Richter's playing is a marvel.
Other than his 2nd Symphony, Prokofiev's modernist impulse is clearest in his works for piano. The 7th and 8th Sonatas especially are masterworks of the early 20th century, and Richter's is THE 8th!
Definitive Eighth.......1999-12-25
I usually have in mind a list of the ten greatest piano recordings of all time. Luckily, having no particular label affiliation, I am compelled to make my choices solely by personal preference, Millenial Collections notwithstanding. The Fifth Concerto is rarely if ever, played. Richter's version is superb. But the Eighth Sonata receives the most excruciatingly beautiful performance. The lyricism, drama, colour are all qualities in this performance that have remained with me for decades. An essential recording for anyone who loves the piano.
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