Originally posted by Heldenleben
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BaL 7.11.20 - Beethoven: Piano Sonata No 29 in B flat, Op 106 ‘Hammerklavier’
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostEither you have a fantastic memory or you have had an Adagio fest - either way thanks ! Any hint of staccato in any of them or simple detachment? It’s so tempting to over pedal here as it is in the lovely d major cross hands section
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI remember details of the Rosen recording pretty well as it was the first one I bought. As for the others, I didn't listen to them all in full - I thought that might be too much of a good thing! Legato pedalling in this passage seems to be the norm.Last edited by Ein Heldenleben; 04-11-20, 10:12.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View Post
Had time to do some listening. Rosen, Schnabel, Brendel, Vogel, Levitt , Roberts , Kempff. You are absolutely right - Legato pedalling the norm though Brendel starts Bar 27 as written - detached chords and then the pedal comes in . At one point you can even hear the damper action - maybe too closely miked or just not quick enough on the clutch? Roberts starts detached and no pedal at bar 27 and then seems to pedal the first beat in the bar thereafter - cant quite work it out. Rosen as you say scrupulously obeys the markings giving almost a staccato feel which gives this F sharp section a drunken lurchy waltz feel . I like it . Tovey though says this must be avoided by not accenting the F sharp bass if I interpret him correctly - whatever. I dont envy the reviewer - there's so much masterly playing - some of the chord voicing is miraculous. Maybe Schnabel wins the palm...
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Originally posted by Maclintick View PostGoode starts the Tutte le corde passage from bar 27 detached, almost staccato, & then pedals through the succeeding bars à la Brendel & Roberts. Annie Fischer legato pedals from bar 27 onwards, & fine as both are, neither achieves the extraordinarily inward & neurotic feeling achieved by Rosen's scrupulous adherence to the Urtext markings, throwing into greater relief the re-appearance of the sustain pedal in Bar 44 -- the spell broken. Must check out Brautigam...& revisit Schnabel, of course...
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Originally posted by rauschwerk View PostI remember details of the Rosen recording pretty well as it was the first one I bought. As for the others, I didn't listen to them all in full - I thought that might be too much of a good thing! Legato pedalling in this passage seems to be the norm.
Oh, and again regarding the Binns Op. 106, Adrian Woodhouse, in the New Standard of 21st August 1981 had this to say, "And hearing the Hammerklavier on an 1825 Viennese fortepiano ... that is all ice and fire is like finding the work afresh".
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I see on Spotify there’s even a Hammerklavier Gilels Vs. Richter Album inviting you to compare the two versions! When Gilels first received adulation in the West on a cultural exchange didn’t he say “if you think I’m good wait till you hear Richter” ?Last edited by Ein Heldenleben; 04-11-20, 13:20.
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Something that I don't think has been mentioned so far in this thread is that, unique among his piano sonatas, Beethoven provided his own metronome markings for Op. 106. 1. Allegro, minim=138; 2. Scherzo: Assai vivace, dotted minim=80; 3. Adagio sostenuto, quaver=92, 4. Largo - Allegro risoluto, crotchet=144. While these may aeem way too fast for a modern grand, on an 1820s instrument of Viennese action they are acheivable to good effect.
See https://notat.io/viewtopic.php?t=538 for further discussion.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostSomething that I don't think has been mentioned so far in this thread is that, unique among his piano sonatas, Beethoven provided his own metronome markings for Op. 106. 1. Allegro, minim=138; 2. Scherzo: Assai vivace, dotted minim=80; 3. Adagio sostenuto, quaver=92, 4. Largo - Allegro risoluto, crotchet=144. While these may aeem way too fast for a modern grand, on an 1820s instrument of Viennese action they are acheivable to good effect.
See https://notat.io/viewtopic.php?t=538 for further discussion.
PS thanks for the link - very interesting - in which one commenter tells us that Sokolov plays the F sharp minor sections staccato!
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostBryn - that’s a whole new thread in itself ! I remember an entire BBC feature on Beethoven metronomes which went into parallax errors , mechanism distortions partly in an attempt to show that they weren’t realistically achievable . I think the feeling is that as you say on lighter touch pianos they are..
PS thanks for the link - very interesting - in which one commenter tells us that Sokolov plays the F sharp minor sections staccato!
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Originally posted by shadybarkis View PostWhat think you of Malcolm Binns account on a George Haschka or even Peter Serkin on a Conrad Graf of 1824/5 unauthenticated? Tinny or tintinnambulatory?
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