BaL 16.12.17 - Schubert: Piano Sonata no. 21 in B flat D960

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  • Eine Alpensinfonie
    Host
    • Nov 2010
    • 20573

    BaL 16.12.17 - Schubert: Piano Sonata no. 21 in B flat D960

    0930
    Building a Library - live. David Owen Norris joins Andrew to explore recordings of Schubert's Piano Sonata in B flat D960.
    Schubert's last sonata, perhaps his greatest achievement in the form, has a feeling of tranquility and ease - the ease of a composer who is relaxed in his ability to express his ideas and emotions. This sonata was to be Schubert's last, and the flow and majesty of the first movement spring from the hymn-like breadth of the opening theme.

    Available versions:

    Valery Afanassiev
    Géza Anda
    Leif Ove Andsnes
    Claudio Arrau (download)
    Paul Badura-Skoda
    Daniel Barenboim DG
    Daniel Barenboim Erato
    Inon Barnatan
    Sebastian Benda
    Paul Berkowitz
    Malcolm Bilson
    Tessa Birnie (download)
    Camiel Boomsma
    Sodi Braide
    Alfred Brendel
    Alfred Brendel
    Rudolf Buchbinder (download)
    Fabrizio Chiovetta
    Gabriel Chodos (download)
    Imogen Cooper
    William Corbett-Jones (download)
    Todd Crow (download)
    Clifford Curzon
    Clifford Curzon
    Jörg Ewald Dähler (download)
    Massimiliano Damerini
    John Damgaard (download)
    Dora Deliyska
    Marta Deyanova
    Shani Diluka
    Barry Douglas
    Nami Ejiri
    Michael Endres
    Kemp English
    Eduard Erdmann
    Christoph Eschenbach
    Meira Farkas
    Vladimir Feltsman
    Sergio Fiorentino (download)
    Annie Fischer
    Leon Fleisher
    Claude Frank
    Anthony Goldstone
    Richard Goode (download)
    Ralf Gothoni (download)
    Ingrid Haebler
    Andreas Haefliger
    Hideyo Harada
    Clara Haskil
    Myra Hess
    Ian Hobson (download)
    Vladimir Horowitz (download)
    Vladimir Horowitz
    Mieczyslaw Horszowski
    Stephen Hough
    Naoyuki Inoue (download)
    Kei Itoh (download)
    Jeno Jando
    Gilbert Kalish
    Miyuji Kaneko (download)
    Howard Karp (download)
    Cyprien Katsaris
    Nina Kavtaradze
    Wilhelm Kempff
    Evgeny Kissin
    Michael Korstick
    Stephen Kovacevich (download)
    Semion Kruchin
    Florian Krumpock (download)
    Anton Kuerti
    Nikolaus Lahusen
    Alicia de Larrocha
    Risto Lauriala
    Trudelies Leonhardt
    George Emmanuel Lazaridis
    Adam Laloum (download)
    Dejan Lazic
    Wolfgang Leibnitz (download)
    Elisabeth Leonskaja
    David Levine (download)
    Paul Lewis
    Hans Leygraf (download)
    Stefan Litwin
    Radu Lupu
    Anna Malikova
    Alan Marks
    Oleg Marshev
    Yury Martynov
    Benjamin Moser
    Tatiana Nikolayeva
    Gerhard Oppitz
    Frederic d’Oria-Nicolas
    Jorge Federico Osorio
    Hans Palsson
    Denis Pascal
    Murray Perahia (download)
    Javier Perianes
    Alfredo Perl
    Maria Perrotta (download)
    Joshua Pierce (download)
    Maria João Pires
    Alain Planés (download)
    Maurizio Pollini
    Menahem Pressler
    Menahem Pressler (DVD)
    Andrew Rangell
    Sviatoslav Richter
    Sviatoslav Richter
    Bernard Roberts
    Jerome Rose
    Peter Rösel (download)
    Victor Rosenbaum (download)
    Carol Rosenberger
    Arthur Rowe
    Piotr Salajczyk
    András Schiff
    András Schiff
    Alexander Schimpf
    Artur Schnabel
    Gilbert Schuchter
    Rudolf Serkin
    Russell Sherman
    Grigory Sokolov (download)
    Jouni Somero (download
    Martin Stadtfeld
    Emmanuel Strosser (download)
    Aki Takahashi (download)
    Marco Tezza (download)
    Hugh Tinney
    Fou Ts’ong
    Mitsuko Uchida
    Christoph Ullrich
    Jan Vermeulen
    Lars Vogt
    Klára Würtz
    Zhu Xiao-Mei (download)
    Christian Zacharias
    Boris Zarankin
    Juana Zayas
    Krystian Zimerman
    Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 23-12-17, 00:01.
  • Barbirollians
    Full Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 11752

    #2
    Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View Post
    0930
    Building a Library - live. David Owen Norris joins Andrew to explore recordings of Schubert's Piano Sonata in B flat D960.
    Schubert's last sonata, perhaps his greatest achievement in the form, has a feeling of tranquility and ease - the ease of a composer who is relaxed in his ability to express his ideas and emotions. This sonata was to be Schubert's last, and the flow and majesty of the first movement spring from the hymn-like breadth of the opening theme.

    Available versions:

    Valery Afanassiev
    Géza Anda
    Leif Ove Andsnes
    Claudio Arrau (download)
    Paul Badura-Skoda
    Daniel Barenboim DG
    Daniel Barenboim Erato
    Inon Barnatan
    Sebastian Benda
    Paul Berkowitz
    Malcolm Bilson
    Tessa Birnie (download)
    Camiel Boomsma
    Sodi Braide
    Alfred Brendel
    Alfred Brendel
    Rudolf Buchbinder (download)
    Fabrizio Chiovetta
    Gabriel Chodos (download)
    Imogen Cooper
    William Corbett-Jones (download)
    Todd Crow (download)
    Clifford Curzon
    Clifford Curzon
    Jörg Ewald Dähler (download)
    Massimiliano Damerini
    John Damgaard (download)
    Dora Deliyska
    Marta Deyanova
    Shani Diluka
    Barry Douglas
    Nami Ejiri
    Michael Endres
    Kemp English
    Eduard Erdmann
    Christoph Eschenbach
    Meira Farkas
    Vladimir Feltsman
    Sergio Fiorentino (download)
    Annie Fischer
    Leon Fleisher
    Claude Frank
    Anthony Goldstone
    Richard Goode (download)
    Ralf Gothoni (download)
    Ingrid Haebler
    Andreas Haefliger
    Hideyo Harada
    Clara Haskil
    Myra Hess
    Ian Hobson (download)
    Vladimir Horowitz (download)
    Vladimir Horowitz
    Mieczyslaw Horszowski
    Stephen Hough
    Naoyuki Inoue (download)
    Kei Itoh (download)
    Jeno Jando
    Gilbert Kalish
    Miyuji Kaneko (download)
    Howard Karp (download)
    Cyprien Katsaris
    Nina Kavtaradze
    Wilhelm Kempff
    Evgeny Kissin
    Michael Korstick
    Stephen Kovacevich (download)
    Semion Kruchin
    Florian Krumpock (download)
    Anton Kuerti
    Nikolaus Lahusen
    Alicia de Larrocha
    Risto Lauriala
    Trudelies Leonhardt
    George Emmanuel Lazaridis
    Adam Laloum (download)
    Dejan Lazic
    Wolfgang Leibnitz (download)
    Elisabeth Leonskaja
    David Levine (download)
    Paul Lewis
    Hans Leygraf (download)
    Stefan Litwin
    Radu Lupu
    Anna Malikova
    Alan Marks
    Oleg Marshev
    Yury Martynov
    Benjamin Moser
    Tatiana Nikolayeva
    Gerhard Oppitz
    Frederic d’Oria-Nicolas
    Jorge Federico Osorio
    Hans Palsson
    Denis Pascal
    Murray Perahia (download)
    Javier Perianes
    Alfredo Perl
    Maria Perrotta (download)
    Joshua Pierce (download)
    Maria João Pires
    Alain Planés (download)
    Maurizio Pollini
    Menahem Pressler
    Menahem Pressler (DVD)
    Andrew Rangell
    Sviatoslav Richter
    Sviatoslav Richter
    Bernard Roberts
    Jerome Rose
    Peter Rösel (download)
    Victor Rosenbaum (download)
    Carol Rosenberger
    Arthur Rowe
    Piotr Salajczyk
    András Schiff
    András Schiff
    Alexander Schimpf
    Artur Schnabel
    Gilbert Schuchter
    Rudolf Serkin
    Russell Sherman
    Grigory Sokolov (download)
    Jouni Somero (download
    Martin Stadtfeld
    Emmanuel Strosser (download)
    Aki Takahashi (download)
    Marco Tezza (download)
    Hugh Tinney
    Fou Ts’ong
    Mitsuko Uchida
    Christoph Ullrich
    Jan Vermeulen
    Lars Vogt
    Klára Würtz
    Zhu Xiao-Mei (download)
    Christian Zacharias
    Boris Zarankin
    Juana Zayas
    Krystian Zimerman
    Top work EA - I do not envy the reviewer.

    Brendel , A.Fischer, Pires, Perahia, Kovacevich and Leon Fleisher here will probably see me out . Leon Fleisher's recording is probably my favourite but whether that also has some association with the fact that it was his first recording of music for two hands since the 1950s I think after his treatment with botox for his dystonia I don't know but I find the recording very moving.

    Comment

    • BBMmk2
      Late Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 20908

      #3
      I do not have any whatsoever Schubert piano sonatas in my collection! Shame on me!
      Don’t cry for me
      I go where music was born

      J S Bach 1685-1750

      Comment

      • Bryn
        Banned
        • Mar 2007
        • 24688

        #4
        A shame. Two of my favourites, Gulda and Staier appear to be out of the catalogue at the moment.

        Comment

        • Richard Tarleton

          #5
          I have two versions - one with the first movement repeat (Uchida) and one without (Brendel 1971). The latter is the one I've lived with for decades. I daresay DON will have something to say on this subject, which people have discussed before on this forum . The second time bar came as a shock the first time I heard it, and I have to say still does, perhaps it was/is meant to? In conversation with Martin Meyer [with apologies to Mr Brendel for this brief, out-of-context extract, but I recommend the original]:

          Martin Meyer: Another question that you have often been asked: I have to ask it, because I think that the few bars which introduce the repeat.....possibly do have a function.
          AB: And what in your opinion is the function of those transition bars?
          MM: That the material at this juncture should, as it were, be threatened by dissonance, even destroyed.
          AB: That would not only destroy the material but also the atmosphere of the movement....These transitional bars seem unconnected with anythng else in the sonata. If, either thematically or psychologically, they pointed to something elswewhere, then I would welcome them. But as that is not the case I do not play the repeat....there are many other reasons...." [which he goes on to elaborate, on p. 127-8 of The Veil of Order. First movement already very long, with moderato tempo not fundamentally different to the moderato tempo of the second movement...repeat signs options, not commands.....]
          MM:...why [did Schubert take] the trouble to compose these bars?
          AB:...[at some length, with reference to the sketches, but an extract]...But the fact is that the jerky rhythm which suddenly appears there is used nowhere else, whereas on the whole this sonata is arranged so harmoniously and lucidly in all its component parts...one has already taken in an extended exposition of the motifs and themes, considerably longer than, for example, the Hammerklavier sonata, to mention another B flat major sonata, and it is quite enough to hear it twice; three times, to me, is decidedly too many...


          Basically, for some reason, Schubert got it wrong, on this occasion.....

          Also much discussion of this work in AB's collection of essays and lectures, "Music, Sense and Nonsense".

          Comment

          • richardfinegold
            Full Member
            • Sep 2012
            • 7737

            #6
            Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View Post
            I do not have any whatsoever Schubert piano sonatas in my collection! Shame on me!
            You must rectify that, BBm. The last 3 Schubert Sonatas in particular are incredible but they all are worth having.
            My first recordings were borrowing the Schnabel lps from my University Library. It wasn’t until much later that I purchased
            Walter Klien on Vox, a set that I listened to recently after randomly pulling it off the shelf and which I found pretty competitive. Richter has long been my favorite but his view is pretty idiosyncratic. Brendel is a deeply felt and stunningly recorded, perhaps the most detailed and natural sounding analog recording of a piano that I know of. Uchida and Schiff are somewhat disappointing in this work; in different ways they both seem to overthink it, and Uchida sounds stiff and unnatural to boot. I have Kempff but haven’t heard it in a while, so perhaps I’ll give it a go. Brendel is my current choice.

            Comment

            • silvestrione
              Full Member
              • Jan 2011
              • 1722

              #7
              Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
              Brendel is a deeply felt and stunningly recorded, perhaps the most detailed and natural sounding analog recording of a piano that I know of.
              Ah, good, not just me then! I've long marvelled over the quality of the recording of the piano in those Philips analogue recordings of Brendel in Schubert and Liszt.

              However, in this sonata, as far as interpretation goes, I've always preferred Schnabel, and now Zimerman. I've listened to Richter a lot as well, but I agree it's going to be too idiosyncratic for many.

              Comment

              • Richard Barrett
                Guest
                • Jan 2016
                • 6259

                #8
                Originally posted by Bryn View Post
                A shame. Two of my favourites, Gulda and Staier appear to be out of the catalogue at the moment.
                Staier is certainly the one for me. Brendel is completely ruled out on account of his not playing the complete piece.

                Comment

                • teamsaint
                  Full Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 25226

                  #9
                  Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View Post
                  I do not have any whatsoever Schubert piano sonatas in my collection! Shame on me!
                  But it's nice to be the target market ?
                  I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.

                  I am not a number, I am a free man.

                  Comment

                  • HighlandDougie
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 3106

                    #10
                    "0930

                    Building a Library - live. David Owen Norris joins Andrew to explore recordings of Schubert's Piano Sonata in B flat D960."

                    The horror, the horror! A two-fer (bad enough) but with my least favourite reviewer. As I foresee even greater playing to the gallery with a captive audience - even when that audience is, what's FHG's term again, "Noddy", I fear that their joint thoughts on this most sublime piece of music will need to pass me by (Arcadi Volodos, live, in August, the best of the many performances I've heard over the years - I hope a recording appears sometime).

                    Comment

                    • Richard Tarleton

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                      Staier is certainly the one for me. Brendel is completely ruled out on account of his not playing the complete piece.
                      Richard - just asking - would you engage at all with Brendel's reasoning (see also #5 )? I'm just reading his essay on the late sonatas in Music, Sense and Nonsense, pp 149 onwards, where he discusses other repeats as well as this one. I'm not even remotely qualified to argue this with you, but I do find Brendel's reasoning (centering around the original sketch, that fortissimo trill, and the length of the movement with the repeat) quite persuasive.

                      Presumably as the BAL is a twofer, we'll have a good cop/bad cop routine around the repeat. If they agree, there's no point in both of them!
                      Last edited by Guest; 07-12-17, 13:41.

                      Comment

                      • ferneyhoughgeliebte
                        Gone fishin'
                        • Sep 2011
                        • 30163

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                        Basically, for some reason, Schubert got it wrong, on this occasion.....
                        I just thought I'd mention that you've typed "Schubert" instead of "Brendel" here, Richard.
                        [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

                        Comment

                        • Richard Barrett
                          Guest
                          • Jan 2016
                          • 6259

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                          Richard - just asking - would you engage at all with Brendel's reasoning
                          I just disagree with it. He has his own ideas about why the first-time passage is not an essential or even desirable part of the music and why the repeat makes the movement too long, but, leaving aside the question of how sacrosanct to regard a composer's score, my personal position is that I do think this passage is indispensable, and I don't think the repeat makes it too long. Therefore I'm just not interested in any performance without the repeat; it's simply not the piece as I understand it but an inappropriately truncated version of it. I'm not particularly convinced by the arguments on either side presented in your #5 and I'm not sure I'd even want to try to put into words what I think the "function" of the disputed passage might be; for me it's self-evidently part of the structural/expressive identity of the music and removing it serves no useful purpose at all - it's up to Brendel to justify his deviation from Schubert's score and I don't think he (or anyone else) can do so except by saying effectively "I just don't like it", in which case why not chop up all the music you play and retain only the bits you like. Or write your own.

                          Comment

                          • Nick Armstrong
                            Host
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 26573

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View Post
                            there's no point in both of them!
                            Correct!
                            "...the isle is full of noises,
                            Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
                            Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
                            Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."

                            Comment

                            • MickyD
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 4819

                              #15
                              Staier for me, too...I happily got hold of it when it was still in the catalogue. Now it is fetching silly prices on the marketplace.

                              Comment

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