Originally posted by Mandryka
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Debussy, Claude (1862-1918)
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Originally posted by Mandryka View PostI've become really intrigued by Albert Ferber’s recording of the etudes. Is there anyone else who makes these etudes sound so beautiful? And makes them sound so consistent with Debussy's style in other music like Preludes II.
I just tried to listen to Joseph Moog play the first book, and though it's clearly fabulous pianism, I felt it didn't have the magic of Ferber. Somehow Moog seemed reductive, reducing the music to thrills about speed and piano technique. Ferber makes them sound to me like some of Debussy's best poetry.
Here, if you don't know it.
Artworks : Luigi RussoloLivre I0:00 : 1. pour les « cinq doigts », d'après monsieur Czerny2:51 : 2. pour les tierces7:12 : 3. pour les quartes12:20 : 4. pou...
Ferber was one of Gieseking’s students - I think there’s only one recording of Gieseking playing the etudes and I like Ferber much more!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFerber does it by glossing or glissing over the sharp harmonic corners of the late Debussy - which maybe Debussy himself would have preferred to the manner in which many of today's interpreters choose rather to bring them out. In some instances with Ferber this works by emphasising whimsy and ironic charm, at others something gets overridden and lost, though in general I do like his approach. But I'm now 77 - I wouldn't have said this 20 0r 30 years ago!
Oh, you’ve made me feel older! Hate Ferber now, I demand sharp edges!
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostA pianist I associate with Saga Records - and Fauré but, at 9 euros for the 5 CD set, his Debussy duly ordered
There’s also some Schubert on Hyperion which I found a bit disappointing.
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Are there any Debussy experts out there who can answer this one?
I've read more than once that at the end of his life Debussy was engaged on a projected series of six chamber works, of which those for violin, cello, and flute/viola/harp were completed. The story then goes 'the unfinished sonata was for oboe, horn and harpsichord'.
Apart from the highly unusual, not to say bizarre, combination of instruments , this makes only four, not six, works. I've wondered if 'sonata was' is a mistranslation of 'sonatas were', that is, an oboe sonata, a hor sonata, and a harpsichord sonata (perhaps intended for Wanda Landowska). Can anyone confirm this?
It's curious that Saint-Saens did write an oboe sonata after Debussy's death.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostIt might be interesting also to note that one of the instrumental groups in Boulez's Domaines, for oboe, horn and amplified guitar, is a deliberate reference to Debussy's unwritten sonata.
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Originally posted by smittims View PostMany thanks, that's fascinating. I've never read, and in fact never seen, a detailed standard biography of Debussy, who appears to have been a very private man.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
Was there a book consisting of Debussy's critical writings on music and other composers, which was said to be revealing about himself? Or am I imagining things?!
Three Classics in the Aesthetic of Music by Claude Debussy | Goodreads
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI would argue for this Debussyian influence being even deeper than in the more overtly referential cases of some of the Spectralist composers
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