I have Perahia and Fischer and adore Fischer, especially some of the cadenzas in 21 and 22. After today I'd like to find time to listen to Krauss, Primakov and Brautigam.
BaL 24.12.16/10.12.22 - Mozart: Piano Concerto no. 21 in C, K467
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAny mention of the recent, widely-acclaimed (including by me) MCO/Andsnes...? A lovely set with 20, 22 and the K478....
Or Brautigam?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Goon525 View PostAndsnes didn’t get a mention. But there are always versions that someone here would have wished to see included! (By the way, Jayne, did you see a PM from me a couple of weeks ago?)
It seemed strange to overlook Andsnes simply because it came out in 2021, and has been widely reviewed and similarly acclaimed.... I would say, deservedly....Gramophone Special Achievement Award 2022, runner-up in the Concerto Category.
The performances can seem slightly cool at first, but one soon comes to appreciate their subtleties; the dialoguing, responsive interplay of soloist/ensemble really makes the set a grower....I felt 21 and 22 were the best of them.
As is often noted, it's impossible for BaL to offer a comprehensive survey of such a work, but surely a few comments on the latest releases (at least those with a generally positive response), or those released since the last survey, might be a good place to start...? The Primakov (2011) looks intriguing, I'll try it later....
(The Odense SO have an interesting discog, including a quirky but very individual Nielsen Cycle with Serov on Kontrapunkt).Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 12-12-22, 20:07.
Comment
-
-
Following the programme, I've just acquired the Uchida and I like it a lot, it's also beautifully recorded. I've also relistened to my other recordings and been a little surprised at the results.
As others have remarked, Annie Fischer came out very well and with rather better sound than Lily Kraus which I thought sounded older than its years in the broadcast.
I was disappointed by Kempff, a lovely touch of course but just too slow throughout, something that I hadn't really noticed when listening to it in isolation. Gulda lingers over every detail, lovely playing but too mannered? It drew me in as it went forwards. Cassadesus is good of course and I didn't find it too slow but it's an old recording now. Speeds have definitely increased over time.
Pires is modern but bland, she didn't seem to have anything to say about the music, for me, the same applies to Perahia and, to a lesser extent Anda, the first performance marketed with the Madigan link. People make a lot of the film's influence but I don't remember it making that big an impact at the time, much more of a niche Art film than a blockbuster and the link between film and music has been reinforced over the years, ClassicFM is guilty here. It's odd because people don't link, for example, the Schubert Notturno and Kubrick's Barry Lyndon to anything like the same extent.
Brendel (Marriner) and Kovacevich are both very good in their ways. Marriner's accompaniment is excellent with great attention to detail and lovely playing although the ASMF sounds very large according to my HIPP influenced ears. Colin Davis, for Kovacevich, gets more of a chamber sound from the LSO than the ASMF or Perahia's ECO.
The piano entry in the slow movement is a defining point for me, the best performances manage a stillness and magic while others sound mechanical in comparison. For me, Uchida was a very good choice and on balance I find it the best of the bunch.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostFollowing the programme, I've just acquired the Uchida and I like it a lot, it's also beautifully recorded. I've also relistened to my other recordings and been a little surprised at the results.
As others have remarked, Annie Fischer came out very well and with rather better sound than Lily Kraus which I thought sounded older than its years in the broadcast.
I was disappointed by Kempff, a lovely touch of course but just too slow throughout, something that I hadn't really noticed when listening to it in isolation. Gulda lingers over every detail, lovely playing but too mannered? It drew me in as it went forwards. Cassadesus is good of course and I didn't find it too slow but it's an old recording now. Speeds have definitely increased over time.
Pires is modern but bland, she didn't seem to have anything to say about the music, for me, the same applies to Perahia and, to a lesser extent Anda, the first performance marketed with the Madigan link. People make a lot of the film's influence but I don't remember it making that big an impact at the time, much more of a niche Art film than a blockbuster and the link between film and music has been reinforced over the years, ClassicFM is guilty here. It's odd because people don't link, for example, the Schubert Notturno and Kubrick's Barry Lyndon to anything like the same extent.
Brendel (Marriner) and Kovacevich are both very good in their ways. Marriner's accompaniment is excellent with great attention to detail and lovely playing although the ASMF sounds very large according to my HIPP influenced ears. Colin Davis, for Kovacevich, gets more of a chamber sound from the LSO than the ASMF or Perahia's ECO.
The piano entry in the slow movement is a defining point for me, the best performances manage a stillness and magic while others sound mechanical in comparison. For me, Uchida was a very good choice and on balance I find it the best of the bunch.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostFollowing the programme, I've just acquired the Uchida and I like it a lot, it's also beautifully recorded. I've also relistened to my other recordings and been a little surprised at the results.
As others have remarked, Annie Fischer came out very well and with rather better sound than Lily Kraus which I thought sounded older than its years in the broadcast.
I was disappointed by Kempff, a lovely touch of course but just too slow throughout, something that I hadn't really noticed when listening to it in isolation. Gulda lingers over every detail, lovely playing but too mannered? It drew me in as it went forwards. Cassadesus is good of course and I didn't find it too slow but it's an old recording now. Speeds have definitely increased over time.
Pires is modern but bland, she didn't seem to have anything to say about the music, for me, the same applies to Perahia and, to a lesser extent Anda, the first performance marketed with the Madigan link. People make a lot of the film's influence but I don't remember it making that big an impact at the time, much more of a niche Art film than a blockbuster and the link between film and music has been reinforced over the years, ClassicFM is guilty here. It's odd because people don't link, for example, the Schubert Notturno and Kubrick's Barry Lyndon to anything like the same extent.
Brendel (Marriner) and Kovacevich are both very good in their ways. Marriner's accompaniment is excellent with great attention to detail and lovely playing although the ASMF sounds very large according to my HIPP influenced ears. Colin Davis, for Kovacevich, gets more of a chamber sound from the LSO than the ASMF or Perahia's ECO.
The piano entry in the slow movement is a defining point for me, the best performances manage a stillness and magic while others sound mechanical in comparison. For me, Uchida was a very good choice and on balance I find it the best of the bunch.
Comment
-
-
The Schubert movement used in Kubrick's Barry Lyndon is in fact the andante con moto from the D929 Piano Trio (not the Notturno). Very hauntingly too, but isn't the Sarabande from the Handel Keyboard Suite in D Minor more likely to be associated with the film?Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 15-12-22, 01:44.
Comment
-
-
Of course it was, thanks for the reminder - a long time since I saw the film.
My point is that film has used classical music many times but it's strange that a relatively obscure film is linked irrevocably with the Mozart piano concerto, surely a major work in its own right. I would argue that the film is only remembered because it used, and later became associated with, the Mozart which is certainly more memorable than the film.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostOf course it was, thanks for the reminder - a long time since I saw the film.
My point is that film has used classical music many times but it's strange that a relatively obscure film is linked irrevocably with the Mozart piano concerto, surely a major work in its own right. I would argue that the film is only remembered because it used, and later became associated with, the Mozart which is certainly more memorable than the film.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by mikealdren View PostOf course it was, thanks for the reminder - a long time since I saw the film.
My point is that film has used classical music many times but it's strange that a relatively obscure film is linked irrevocably with the Mozart piano concerto, surely a major work in its own right. I would argue that the film is only remembered because it used, and later became associated with, the Mozart which is certainly more memorable than the film.
Prior to this I believe classical record companies were rather reluctant to associate their recordings with films. As I recall Decca only gave permission for the use of HvK's recording of Also Sprach Zarathustra on the 2001 soundtrack on condition that the film company didn't reveal which recording was used.
Although the Handel Sarabande did become indelibly linked with its use in Barry Lyndon, I don't recall any recordings of it being marketed as "as heard in Barry Lyndon".
Funnily enough, the Jupiter Ensemble played the Sarabande at a concert at the Wigmore Hall last week, and they referenced it as now being one of Handel's most famous pieces thanks to Stanley Kubrick"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
Comment
-
Comment