Originally posted by gradus
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"Schumann’s "Carnaval", one of the very few large-scale solo works Rachmaninov was able to set down, is a famous recording but also a controversial one. I must say that, alongside the Schubert Impromptu it’s almost a model of fidelity! It’s true that Rachmaninov announces early on that he’s going to be his own man, when he plays the forte interjections in "Pierrot" staccato (they are marked legato), but it’s also true that I’ve never heard this usually rather doleful little piece sound so convincing and in any case this is imaginative music that cannot be played just literally. Rachmaninov’s flexible yet infectious rhythm carries him through in a performance that has tremendous overall sweep while finding time to characterize to the full every nook and cranny of the score. This is one of the great Schumann performances on record."
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