Originally posted by Bryn
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Beethoven. Diabelli Variations. Op. 120
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Originally posted by gradus View PostA few years Uchida performed the Diabelli and afterwards gave a lecture on her approach to the work. I saw her in Cambridge but I think she repeated it at various venues. Unfortunately It is not a work that I have lived with for donkeys years so have no other versions in my head with which to compare her interpretation, but as a novice I found her approach captivating as is almost everything that she plays.
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostIs this Demus one (which has become impossible to find!) different from this?
https://www.qobuz.com/gb-en/album/be.../0884385827502
Looks like I should back up the Eloquence Demus discs a.s.a.p. I wonder why they were removed from their catalogue?
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostYes, as I recall, though the timings are very similar. However, the Eloquence issue appears to be downloadable, albeit in lossy data compression, from https://music.apple.com/au/album/145...ct=catchall_p1
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostIt is deleted from the Eloquence catalogue and not available as a download from Presto either!
Can stream from Spotify or Deezer!
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI can't, or from Qobuz. I may be able to buy it from Qobuz, but I don't want to.
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Originally posted by pastoralguy View PostI recently purchased the new Mitsuko Uchida recording of this masterpiece having heard her play it at the Edinburgh Festival three years ago. It’s a work I really struggle with and I’d hoped this new recording might give me an appreciation of it. However, it’s just not working for me.
I ordered the Uchida cd from Presto along with a cd that’s not released until the beginning of May so I’m still awaiting the physical disc but I have been listening to it repeatedly on my iPhone whilst doing particularly mind numbing tasks while on night shift at my place of employment. Not the best environment to gain appreciation of one of the great masterpieces but it’s what I’ve got.
My next move is to borrow the music from the public library where perhaps the eye will assist the ear. What am I not getting about this piece? Goodness knows, I love the piano sonatas so this should be easy.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI have long been puzzled by the SBS logo associated with Eloquence on this and some other Eloquence issues. I now find it appears to stand for Australia's "Special Broadcasting Service". Perhaps that connection has something to do with the removal from the Eloquence catalogue.
I'm glad I snapped up the Demus/Eloquence release when I did. In addition, a second disc provided examples of the Diabelli theme set by other contemporary composers of Beethoven, all very fascinating.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostWhen I was out there in the 80s, SBS was a sort of Channel 4 TV station in Australia, but looks like they have moved into other areas as well.
I'm glad I snapped up the Demus/Eloquence release when I did. In addition, a second disc provided examples of the Diabelli theme set by other contemporary composers of Beethoven, all very fascinating.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostHave heard the Staier, either the CD or one of the broadcast concert performances on his Graf copy? It might raise a few hackles with those resistant to historical pianos but his study of the manuscript with the composer's annotations opened up a good many departures from the 'norm'.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostNo, Bryn, I confess it is still on my shopping list and really must get hold of it - of all early pianos, the Grafs are the ones that I find the most alluring, such beautiful ethereal sounds. Richard Burnett recorded a lot on his original instrument, too, at Finchcocks. Another set of discs I really like are the Beethoven violin sonatas with Schroder and Jos Van Immerseel - he plays on an 1824 Graf and the DHM recording is so much to my taste.
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As everyone knows, Beethoven wrote some variations in 1819, and then left the project for a few years. The 1819 version -- if it can be called that -- is on record here on Track 9 disc 1 here
It's very stylishly and elegantly and expressively and intimately played by Jan Michaels, a new name for me, but I intend to explore some of his other recordings.
He realized different complete cycles: all Beethoven sonatas, all pianoworks of Schoenberg, Webern and Berg and the complete chamber music with piano of Johannes Brahms.
I can't help but think that The Diabelli Variations is like AoF in a way, in that the composer put the project aside for a considerable amount of time before returning to it. In the case of AoF I always feel that the best music came later, and recordings which just cover the earlier fugues leave out my favourite music.
I don't know if I feel like that about the Diabelli Variations.
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