Originally posted by waldo
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The Well-Tempered Clavier.
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Originally posted by MickyDI'm with you regarding Gilbert...lovely playing. I'm disappointed to hear about the Egarr...I haven't bought it yet but I love all his other recordings. And yes, he enjoys a beautiful recorded sound from Harmonia Mundi.
But its all very personal. I love Arrau's Beethoven, but I can quite see how his little hesitations and pauses would drive others mad.
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Wouldn't want to be without Sviatoslav Richter, but would also recommend Andras Schiff and Edwin Fischer. Three very different interpretations. Pity about the poor recording quality of the Fischer; a brief excerpt on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpyBcSAxqdQMy life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Originally posted by waldo View PostNot this again........Doesn't it get boring?
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostYes again. While the 48 can indeed be played on the percussive pianoforte, it was written with the plucked harpsichord in mind. Bach was reported to be unhappy with the early percussive stringed keyboard instrument he encountered. I am happy to have various recordings in which the pianoforte is used, a particular favourite being that by Friedrich Gulda. However, playing the 48 on a piano should be considered as a supplement to performances using a harpsichord, surely?.
I am not dismissing your position or your interest in this, I just don't know how many times we can all flog the same dead horse. Not on every thread, anyway.
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Peter Hill, academic and virtuoso pianist, has recorded a very sane traversal of the 48 for Delphian Records. He is perhaps best known for his recording of the complete piano works of Olivier Messiaen. The part-writing is clearly delineated and Hill avoids extremes of tempo which some better-known names indulge in.
Book II, which was recorded first, is reviewed here by Robert Matthew-Walker:
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostPeter Hill, academic and virtuoso pianist, has recorded a very sane traversal of the 48 for Delphian Records. He is perhaps best known for his recording of the complete piano works of Olivier Messiaen. The part-writing is clearly delineated and Hill avoids extremes of tempo which some better-known names indulge in.
Book II, which was recorded first, is reviewed here by Robert Matthew-Walker:
http://www.classicalsource.com/db_co...w.php?id=10060
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For piano, you can't get much better than Angela Hewitt on Hyperion. If I could only have one version, that would be it - though, as with other towering masterpieces, no one intrepretation is really enough. She has recorded it twice; not much between them except the latter has more rubato and is a bit more "expressive". On balance, I prefer the earlier recording (still modern, excellent sound), but that's probably because that is what I am used to. Anyway, you can listen to long excerpts on the Hyperion site.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostYes again. While the 48 can indeed be played on the percussive pianoforte, it was written with the plucked harpsichord in mind. Bach was reported to be unhappy with the early percussive stringed keyboard instrument he encountered. I am happy to have various recordings in which the pianoforte is used, a particular favourite being that by Friedrich Gulda. However, playing the 48 on a piano should be considered as a supplement to performances using a harpsichord, surely?.
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostAngela Hewitt, yes, but I can't remember which P & F it was, quite early on in Book 1, IIRR, she clipped a note too short, which put me off entirely that recording.
Seriously, though, you might want to go back to Hewitt. She is not a clipper, in general, and usually plays the music with exceptional fidelity and an almost complete lack of mannerisms. If she did it, it was probably there in the music - unless she was exaggerating a dotted rhythm, as many do in baroque dance pieces.
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