I heard a young Pianist on the radio today playing a few of the Mazurkas. There seemed to be a lot of italicizing, rubato for the sake of rubato, interrupting the flow of the music. It would be hard to imagine dancing to this Pianist. These pieces are gems, each a Fabrege Egg, and while they have their share of unusual accents and of beats, i think that they can be overinterpreted to death. Artur Rubinstein was the master here.
Chopin Mazurkas
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostI heard a young Pianist on the radio today playing a few of the Mazurkas. There seemed to be a lot of italicizing, rubato for the sake of rubato, interrupting the flow of the music. It would be hard to imagine dancing to this Pianist. These pieces are gems, each a Fabrege Egg, and while they have their share of unusual accents and of beats, I think that they can be overinterpreted to death. Artur Rubinstein was the master here.
That's the trick with Chopin, I think. Claudio Arrau also gets it sounding exactly right for my taste. More savoury than sweet, I'd say....
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Originally posted by visualnickmos View PostI wasn't referring to the Mazurkas specifically - more his Chopin generally..... His concertos on Philips Duo - very commanding performances.
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David Owen Norris, in his BaL, recommended the recent (2013) Harasiewicz set http://www.mdt.co.uk/chopin-57-mazur...nifc-2cds.html . The customer reviews on Amazon seem to back him up.
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