Did anyone hear the new recording of this which Andrew played on Saturday morning just after 9AM? I own only the Donohoe/Maggini recording on Naxos which I listened to again last night with a great deal of pleasure. Does anyone else love this work, and what favourite recordings do you have?
Elgar's Piano Quintet
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
-
Norfolk Born
Hurrah! Another excuse to enthuse about Elgar's chamber works. I have the recording by the Nash Ensemble with Ian Brown (now available on Helios, I think), and also an off-air recording of the same pianist with the Sorrel quartet. I saw the latter play it at at the 2007 Three Choirs Festival. The smallness of the venue (St. Lode's Church) and the power of the performance mad it quite an occasion. Music in Felixstowe are going to present an all-Elgar concert, including the quartet and the quintet, in their 2011-2012 season at our local church.
-
Don Petter
Another great favourite here!
I have the following on CD:
Bingham/Medici (2 recordings)
Aura
Ogdon/Allegri
Cohen/Stratton
Donohoe/Maggini
Schiller/Coull
Also, on LP:
Cassini/Aeolian
Roberts/Chilingirian
(Though the last two haven't seen the light of day for quite a while.)
I think I like the Bingham/Medicis best. Not much difference between the two as I recall, though this may spur me to have another listen.
Comment
-
I have the Donoghoe/Maggini to, and the Ogdon/Allegri, but not the Nash Ensemble and Ian Brown. The latter would be a most interesting acquisition, because theydo every time in whatever eecording the produce, make a truly magnificent performance.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by DoctorT View PostDid anyone hear the new recording of this which Andrew played on Saturday morning just after 9AM? . . .My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
Comment
-
-
A wonderful work. I've got an excellent old cfp CD - Piers Lane with the Vellinger quartet - still available I think. It’s coupled with the string quartet written in the same year.
I heard the Nash Ensemble with Ian Brown (of course!) at the Wigmore Hall a couple or so years ago. Very excellent and very moving.
Comment
-
-
This new Hyperion seems to be worth considering:
<p>Inspired by the rural beauty of the surroundings at his country retreat in 1917, Edward Elgar embarked on the composition of some of his most inspired and imaginative chamber works.</p> <p>Both the String Quartet and the Piano Quintet are works of great depth and elegance. Their conservative style disregards the compositional trends of the time and displays an unabashed late-romanticism. Elgar wrote: ‘It is full of golden sounds and I like it. But you must not expect anything violently chromatic or cubist.’</p> <p>The disc features sumptuous playing from the acclaimed Goldner String Quartet, who are joined by pianist Piers Lane for Elgar’s sublime Piano Quintet, a large-scale work of almost orchestral sonority.</p> <p>These masterpieces are accompanied by four previously unrecorded works for solo piano, the last of which was written by Elgar at the age of 72. They are intimate, charming rarities, superbly performed by Lane.</p>
Comment
-
-
Norfolk Born
£9.95 from Europadisc. Recorded, I see, at Potton Hall, where the Magginis have frequently recorded for Naxos.
Comment
Comment