Caliban undergoes a sea change
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Since this is a thread of dramatic revelation please allow me to say that I have no problems with the “liberties “ Koch takes with Schubert - though the excerpts are so short I am not sure I am hearing the best examples. I am all for freedom in piano playing - so Many pianists these days just sound the same . 90 years ago they were instantly identifiable. We can never know for sure but I bet early 19th pianists used massive rubato , filled in chords , played asynchronously. My big problem is the piano sound. It just sounds out of tune to me - the strings seem to produce a decay with the frequencies beating against each other to an even more pronounced degree than a modern grand. I just don’t like fortepianos or early concert grands. Sorry but there it is ...
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First of all, thanks Jayne for mentioning this release, which had passed me by completely. Regarding the B flat Sonata, of which I've so far only heard the first movement, the score does say "molto moderato" and I do think Koch is somewhere outside the range of feasible tempi implied by that indication. Also I don't really see what expressive or structural purpose is served by desynchronising the hands for emphasis in the way he does it, which sounds to me like a throwback to harpsichord technique where spreading a chord makes it sound louder, as a substitute for not having any other control over dynamics. The instrument sounds beautiful to be sure, and I would be the last to say this music "shouldn't" be performed in any way a pianist feels it might be, but clearly I don't have much personal sympathy with the way Koch (unlike say Schiff or Staier) feels about this piece, so I'm not sure about listening to the rest of it. I agree with Heldenleben that too many pianists sound the same, and this often goes also for pianists using period instruments (see Richard Taruskin's Text and Act), and maybe too many listeners listen the same too, but for me there's a difference between being jolted from my comfort zone in order to hear a familiar piece in a new way and feeling that this just isn't the piece as I understand it.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostFirst of all, thanks Jayne for mentioning this release, which had passed me by completely. Regarding the B flat Sonata, of which I've so far only heard the first movement, the score does say "molto moderato" and I do think Koch is somewhere outside the range of feasible tempi implied by that indication. Also I don't really see what expressive or structural purpose is served by desynchronising the hands for emphasis in the way he does it, which sounds to me like a throwback to harpsichord technique where spreading a chord makes it sound louder, as a substitute for not having any other control over dynamics. The instrument sounds beautiful to be sure, and I would be the last to say this music "shouldn't" be performed in any way a pianist feels it might be, but clearly I don't have much personal sympathy with the way Koch (unlike say Schiff or Staier) feels about this piece, so I'm not sure about listening to the rest of it. I agree with Heldenleben that too many pianists sound the same, and this often goes also for pianists using period instruments (see Richard Taruskin's Text and Act), and maybe too many listeners listen the same too, but for me there's a difference between being jolted from my comfort zone in order to hear a familiar piece in a new way and feeling that this just isn't the piece as I understand it.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post'defamiliarisation'
'contemplative essences'.
I'm going to return my degree diploma and sue Southampton University on the grounds that they obviously sent out into the world with a grossly inadequate vocabulary and absolutely no feeling for music or indeed any serious subject-matter.
Perhaps I should get in touch with an administrator to discuss the possibility of changing my on-screen name to Redbrick Lowbrow.
Just asking for a fiend...
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWelcome back JLW - now what do you think of only 46 minutes music on that new Beethoven PC 4 with just two overtures....
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostWelcome back JLW - now what do you think of only 46 minutes music on that new Beethoven PC 4 with just two overtures....
The CD set of the Tobias Koch Schubert may seem to indulge a similar extravagance with each sonata on a separate disc (no fillers).... but if you play physical discs, would you want to break them up? Surely not, and especially with these readings.
So some justification...and it is a very handsomely produced fold-out, with exceptionally insightful, original and detailed essays on Schubert and his music, including a fairly lengthy one from the pianist himself, which reads as a creative credo for his approach. Very convincingly too, though I didn't read it until I'd heard all three sonatas several times over, and many excerpts, comparisons etc.
Koch makes the point I outlined above (which I felt before I read him), that "the essential inner relationship between Schubert's last three piano sonatas dictate that they should be heard in immediate succession. The close encounter of the third kind: should not the narrative conflicts and rhythmic and harmonic signs of dissolution in the first two sonatas have already been grasped and experienced to fully understand the disquieting slowness and mystery of the final sonata, illuminated from within with its warm glow?"
Which comment may remind us of Harnoncourt (similarly adventurous and often accused of...."mannered phrasing") and Mozart's Instrumental Oratorium....
No booklet on Qobuz sadly, but you may track it down elsewhere. Tobias Koch's comments on the musical structures and how they relate to mood and emotion, their comparisons with Beethoven etc., are very interesting indeed, clearly elaborated and expressed. So a fascinating artist, however you respond to his musical creations on this particular release.
(if like me you are a Schumann obsessive do seek out that 3-disc set of the Violin/Piano Music with Landgraf - on the Genuin label)
Listen to unlimited or download SCHUMANN, R.: Violin and Piano Music (Complete) (Landgraf, Koch) (Robert Schumann - Johannes Brahms - Albert Dietrich) by Lisa Marie Landgraf in Hi-Res quality on Qobuz. Subscription from £10.83/month.
....a fascinating contrast with the Maalismaa/Holmström).Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 16-09-20, 15:55.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostSo what you perceive to be your shortcomings in vocabulary and feeling for music or any serious subject are solely the responsibility of Southampton University?...
Just asking for a fiend...
Who the devil is your fiend, may I ask?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post... if, that is, you ignore the actual tempo indications!
Life, time and music can have many forms and variations of slowness....slow listening isn't the same as slow playing, whether metaphorical or not...
There is a slowness within speed as your relativistic perception sees the whole passage, the whole work, as it passes ....
The Buzzard soars above the meadow......tenses....shapes..... suddenly dives, seizes the mouse, sweeps away!
Then it is there, as always, soaring again.....
Time is both fast and slow according to your view....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 16-09-20, 17:47.
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