I like Daniel Ericourt on Ivory Classics (as did the BAL reviewer). As a teenager he turned pages for Debussy, so HIP I guess. Very early French. Sharper than Uchida (just) in the Etudes. The recordings are old and a bit thin, but extremely musical and not too pianistic.
Debussy Piano Music
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amateur51
Originally posted by Beresford View PostI like Daniel Ericourt on Ivory Classics (as did the BAL reviewer). As a teenager he turned pages for Debussy, so HIP I guess. Very early French. Sharper than Uchida (just) in the Etudes. The recordings are old and a bit thin, but extremely musical and not too pianistic.
rec. 1962Pianist Daniel Ericourt (1903-88) boasted an impressive artistic resume, including working relationships with Isadora Duncan, Nadia Boulanger, Aaron...
Home of American classical music record label governed by the Ivory Classics Foundation. The purpose of this foundation, established in 1998, is to promote, through charitable and benevolent activities, an appreciation for the art of the piano through its work with the premier audiophile piano label Ivory Classics.
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Originally posted by Roslynmuse View PostI'd forgotten about the six lp set of complete Debussy recorded by Peter Frankl in - I guess - the 60s and issued in the UK on Turnabout. Recorded sound leaves something to be desired, as was often the case with those Vox/Turnabout recordings (Brendel/Beethoven, Klein/Mozart, Kentner/Liszt, Ponti (there's a name we never hear now)/Tchaikovsky etc) - but rather good performances, as I recall. Incidentally, I also collected the Frankl Schumann cycle - 4 x 3 lp boxes issued in the UK in the late 70s, early 80s - many years later, finding the 5th (Vox) box, never released here, on eBay. Sorry, off-topic; but the Turnabout label was, I guess, the Naxos of its day.
Your post reminds me that I too used to own one of the Frankl Schuman boxes, which was probably my introduction to to Carnaval. I believe the box also contained a lot of his lesser known later works.
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Originally posted by Beresford View PostI like Daniel Ericourt on Ivory Classics (as did the BAL reviewer). As a teenager he turned pages for Debussy, so HIP I guess. Very early French. Sharper than Uchida (just) in the Etudes. The recordings are old and a bit thin, but extremely musical and not too pianistic.
And for an even HIPPer selection:
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOne of the then 2 remaining copies will soon be Grooving its way to me. Given the prices for individual discs via Amazon, the asking price from Grooves is astonishing. Act fast. Still one copy left when I last looked.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostOne of the then 2 remaining copies will soon be Grooving its way to me. Given the prices for individual discs via Amazon, the asking price from Grooves is astonishing. Act fast. Still one copy left when I last looked.
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Right, thanks very much for all the advice people.Much appreciated.
I am confused now, so a vote , I think !!
OK, perhaps not, but I shall be putting on of these on the TS letter to Santa
At the current price and given the comments, the Fergus- Thompson at under £12 looks very appealing.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Curiouser and curiouser. The track-listing sheet for the CDs (you get no programme notes as such), gives a single recording date of 1980, yet the 6 LP set issued in 1984 (replete with programme notes) shows recording publication dates of 1974, 1976, 1979, 1980 and 1981. A somewhat slap-dash approach to the re-issue project, what?
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostAt the current price and given the comments, the Fergus- Thompson at under £12 looks very appealing.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAnd very good that set is too. A true bargain I would say. I paid something more in the region of £20, though I did get the Ravel piano works (Paul Crossley) in the same set.
One of the better things about life currently the unbelievable value in recorded music.
On your understandable complaint about your new set, I would suggest that these things are probably put together by inexperienced and poorly paid staff under very tight time constraints. Certainly that is frequently the case in book publishing.Indexes seem to suffer pretty badly !
However, its still pretty inexcusable. One of my gripes about box sets is the failure, often, to put even the movement information on the cardboard sleeves. i know time is money, but copy and pasting a bit of information is the work of moments for a half decent designer.
your date thing is intriguing...probably just took the first date they saw.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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