Originally posted by verismissimo
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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 verismissimo View PostBinns on the Haschka of c1825 is absolutely terrific - playing, instrument, recording. And it seems to be readily available on a twofer of the late sonatas:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Beethoven-P...s=music&sr=1-1
I've now re-listened to Binns's Op 101 (1816) recording which precedes his Op 106 (1818-19) on the same CD. They are played on two different instruments - Op 101 on a French Erard of 1818, Op 106 on the Viennese Georg Haschka of c 1825 - and although only seven years apart they seem to be in different worlds, the Haschka sounding much more like a modern piano.
The Haschka remains wooden framed, but has (according to the notes) a 'heavy framework that keeps this type of wooden-framed instrument particularly stable'.Last edited by verismissimo; 05-11-20, 10:27.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostI've now re-listened to Binns's Op 101 (1816) recording which precedes his Op 106 (1818-19) on the same CD. They are played on two different instruments - Op 101 on a French Erard of 1818, Op 106 on the Viennese Georg Haschler of c 1825 - and although only seven years apart they seem to be in different worlds, the Haschler sounding much more like a modern piano.
The Haschler remains wooden framed, but has (according to the notes) a 'heavy framework that keeps this type of wooden-framed instrument particularly stable'.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostHaschler? Is that yet another alternative spelling? I have seen both Hasska and Haschka but Haschler is new to me. https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=...hasska&f=false
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostI've now re-listened to Binns's Op 101 (1816) recording which precedes his Op 106 (1818-19) on the same CD. They are played on two different instruments - Op 101 on a French Erard of 1818, Op 106 on the Viennese Georg Haschler of c 1825 - and although only seven years apart they seem to be in different worlds, the Haschka sounding much more like a modern piano.
The Haschka remains wooden framed, but has (according to the notes) a 'heavy framework that keeps this type of wooden-framed instrument particularly stable'.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostBinns on the Haschka of c1825 is absolutely terrific - playing, instrument, recording. And it seems to be readily available on a twofer of the late sonatas:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Beethoven-P...s=music&sr=1-1
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Originally posted by shadybarkis View PostThanks for the link and I may well order that twofer provided it comes with a woofer! I have many f-p traversals but few possess a more fulsome sound than my upright Bechstein Medieval model but Brautigam is an exception. I just feel that in this repetory LvB would plump for the Steinway of Perahia in preference to the fortepiano. As I'm here let me share my prognostications for Saturday and to mention that they are all remarked on here but I chose them before I rejoined this august gathering a few days ago. (1) Gilels. (2) Perahia. (3) Brautigam. Joint Archival choices - Solomon/Yudina.
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Originally posted by shadybarkis View PostThanks for the link and I may well order that twofer provided it comes with a woofer! I have many f-p traversals but few possess a more fulsome sound than my upright Bechstein Medieval model but Brautigam is an exception. I just feel that in this repetory LvB would plump for the Steinway of Perahia in preference to the fortepiano. As I'm here let me share my prognostications for Saturday and to mention that they are all remarked on here but I chose them before I rejoined this august gathering a few days ago. (1) Gilels. (2) Perahia. (3) Brautigam. Joint Archival choices - Solomon/Yudina.
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Originally posted by shadybarkis View PostI just feel that in this repetory LvB would plump for the Steinway of Perahia in preference to the fortepiano.
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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.
As to tempo, pace John Ruggero etc, in movt 1 Brautigam opts not for minim = 138 but a standard line-&-length at a tad under 110. To your and Ruggero's observations vis-a-vis Czerny, I add that Brendel observes (Music Sounded Out pp. 66 --67 ) that LVB changed his mind about the original Allegro Assai, rescinding the "assai" from the first published version. (The Notatio blog has some interesting comments from a poster identifying as Vaughan, on the ways in which a performer's mental conception of tempo can differ radically from eventual practice...)Last edited by Maclintick; 06-11-20, 01:29.
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostI would have thought Gilels was too leisurely and idiosyncratic in the first movement, thoughtful as he is. He does strange things with the anticipations of the fanfare at the beginning and end of the development. and gives the whole movement a tragic feel, IMV, even before we get to the B Minor outburst.
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