@brassbandmaestro Ross plays the harpsichord. Mikhail Pletnev has a good disc of selected Scarlatti Sonatas on the Virgin label.
Bach (and early keyboard music) on the Piano: thoughts
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Mattbod
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Mattbod
@Vinteuill Each to their own but i find her playing inspiring and her booklet notes (see her recordings of the 48 for example) to be the height of erudition and scholarly comment and have helped me in my playing no end (sadly i have no access to a harpsichord: i was offered one free but had no space and would have had to have learned to tune it!)
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Originally posted by Mattbod View Post@brassbandmaestro Ross plays the harpsichord. Mikhail Pletnev has a good disc of selected Scarlatti Sonatas on the Virgin label.
Christian Zacharias
Vladimir Horowitz.
If you want to have a feeling of what a fortepiano account of Scarlatti, closer to the time he composed, might have sounded like, I commend a CD by Linda Nicholson on the capriccio label.
These are all great fun : but in the end I feel Scarlatti's music is clearly written with the harpsichord in mind - in terms of attack, brio, colour - so that any piano version is a bit of a lame imitation.
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Originally posted by Mattbod View Post@Vinteuill Each to their own but i find her [Angela Hewitt's] playing inspiring
She reminds me of Anita Brookner .
Of course, some people like Anita Brookner...
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amateur51
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... well, each to his or her own, yes indeed - I just find her painful carefulness, exactitude, ultra-correctness - leads to a feeling of claustrophobic prissiness. Everything is "just so". Not what I want in any musician.
She reminds me of Anita Brookner .
Of course, some people like Anita Brookner...
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Mattbod
Hmmm interesting perspective on Angela. I have never found her playing mechanical at all.She has a great sense of rhythm (she is also a trained dancer) and her touch is sublime. I find Schiff is very precise (and dare I say it German) in his playing but not Angela Hewitt. Her playing is very much like Murray Perahia's in my opinion. Certainly with Bach there is a lot of mathematics involved but you can still use rubato (and different registers on the harpsichord) and vary your touch (on the piano) which Angela Hewett states that he does. I have never heard her live but people say her live shows are exceptional and very moving.
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I cannot abide Angela 'metronome' Hewitt.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... the Pletnev is certainly interesting : but if you want Scarlatti on the piano, for me there are two exceptional performers -
Christian Zacharias
Vladimir Horowitz.
If you want to have a feeling of what a fortepiano account of Scarlatti, closer to the time he composed, might have sounded like, I commend a CD by Linda Nicholson on the capriccio label.
These are all great fun : but in the end I feel Scarlatti's music is clearly written with the harpsichord in mind - in terms of attack, brio, colour - so that any piano version is a bit of a lame imitation.
The Nicholson CD seems relatively difficult to find now http://classical.premieremusic.net/catalog/cd/CAP67112/ though I spotted one apparently new on eBay - not sure if it's a "one off" - http://www.ebay.ca/itm/SCARLATTI-SON...-/140947468901
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
PS: CDs may be difficult to find, but downloads or streaming are possible at various locations - eMusic, iTunes and Spotify all have a lot of Nicholson's recordings available including at least one CD of Scarlatti.Last edited by Dave2002; 16-11-13, 09:09.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI've heard Egarr using what is IMHO too much rubato (that's the only word for it). I realise he is trying to be creative about phrasing, but I occasionally experience a sort of aural mal de mer. I acknowledge that he is a great musician with enormous talents, but again, one man's meat, etc
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