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... does anyone know why Staier's D960 has become so mythically unavailable? Is it that the man himself has had second thoughts and prevents reissue??
I rather doubt that Andreas Staier had much say in the matter. Though D958 and D959 were re-issued for a while on Warner's Elatus label, I don't recall seeing D960 under that flag. Perhaps they were worried it might look like short measure as the only work on a single CD.
Oh boy. More Schubert. Deep breath. I had flashbacks of last month's wall-to-wall Franzi on BBC Radio Three. Nothing's come closer to ending my lifelong love affair with the tubby Austrian than the endless stream of half-finished three-part drinking songs that seemed to become the mainstay of that week-long celebration. Thankfully, last night at the Royal Festival Hall, we weren't getting any old Schubert. We were getting the great final trio of piano sonatas. And it wasn't just any old pianist performing them.
I rarely agree with anything Andrew Clements writes and this is no exception. Re the Steven Osborne recital he refers to, although I did not hear the London performance last year I did hear him play the last 3 sonatas at Cheltenham and that was a much more impressive recital imo than the Uchida one on Monday. Uchida is of course a very fine pianist but I just don't think she was anything near her best in that recital. Sometimes I wonder whether critics hear what they expect and want to hear.
I rarely agree with anything Andrew Clements writes ... Sometimes I wonder whether critics hear what they expect and want to hear.
I reckon that's spot on, especially so of AC . Much of the time you can predict what he'll write based on a knowledge of his previous work, and with uncanny accuracy (down to the usual formulations).
Clements is a law to himself; witness his review of Barry Douglas' latest Brahms recital. While admiring much of his playing, Clements gave the record only 2 stars (out of 5) for the simple expedient that he did not care for the juxtaposition of compositions.
Clements is a law to himself; witness his review of Barry Douglas' latest Brahms recital. While admiring much of his playing, Clements gave the record only 2 stars (out of 5) for the simple expedient that he did not care for the juxtaposition of compositions.
He didn't like Douglas breaking up the 'sets' of pieces? It's an excellent CD (IMO) with a rich and varied account of the 'Handel Variations', so I hope Clements hasn't put people off it.
Having not listened 'live' on Monday night, not being a particular fan of Uchida's Philips recordings of the Schubert sonatas, and having read the rather negative views expressed here regarding the performance, I have only today steeled myself to listen to the recital via the iPlayer's HD Sound facility. O.k., there a few finger slips, but so what? I'd much rather hear tightrope risk-taking performances such as these than note perfect 'safe' ones. I just wish she would wait for the audience to stop fidgeting before starting the next movement each time.
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