Arthur Rubinstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49)
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Despite Arthur Rubinstein's extroverted personality and open-hearted interpretive approach, his performances of Chopin's introspective, half-lit Nocturnes inspired him to some of his greatest recordings, as this, the last of his three traversals of the 19, amply demonstrates. His earlier recordings, from 1936-37 and 1949-50, have their admirers, but this set dating from 1965 and 1967 is superior for its interpretive depth and realistic stereo sound. It's a touch slower than the earlier versions, and Rubinstein's glorious tone color, mastery of shadings, and unerring sense of rubato help make these among his greatest recordings. He makes the music breathe as few others have; the melodies go straight to the heart thanks to subtle phrasing that wrings worlds of emotion without wallowing. That sense of naturalness and inevitability in his playing can be heard in every one of these 19 works. It makes the start of Op. 27, No. 1 deeply moving and inspires awe at the way he brings structural clarity to Op. 48, No. 1 without compromising its mood. Others may have equaled his achievement in one or another of these works, but as a set, this is inspired pianism. --Dan Davis
Arthur Rubinstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49), Music, Fryderyk Chopin, Artur Rubinstein, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Artists, Classical Music, Coll. of Character/Single-Movement/Misc. Works for Keyb., Keyboard, Nocturne for Keyboard
Average customer rating:
- THE GREATEST OF CHOPIN PIANISTS
- The greatest interpretation
- Not such a great album
- Love it.
- RECORDING QUALITY IS A FACTOR
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Arthur Rubinstein plays Chopin [Box Set]
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
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Similar Items:
- Arthur Rubinstein: Ludwig Van Beethoven Piano Sonatas
- Arthur Rubinstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49)
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- Beethoven: The Complete Symphonies and Piano Concertos
ASIN: B000002S59
Release Date: 1994-03-15 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E minor, Op. 11: Allegro maestoso risoluto
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E minor, Op. 11: Romanze (Larghetto) -
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In E minor, Op. 11: Rondo vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In F minor, Op. 21: Maestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In F minor, Op. 21: Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In F minor, Op. 21: Allegro vivace
- Waltz In C Sharp Minor, Op. 64, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 1 In B Flat Minor, Op. 9 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 2 In E Flat Major, Op. 9 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 3 In B Major, Op. 9 No. 3
Tracks:
- Nocturne No. 4 In F Major, Op. 15 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 5 In F Sharp Major, Op. 15 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 6 In G Minor, Op. 15 No. 3
- Nocturne No. 7 In C Sharp Minor, Op. 27 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 8 In D Flat Major, Op. 27 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 9 In B Major, Op. 32 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 10 In A Flat Major, Op. 32 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 11 In G Minor, Op. 37 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 12 In G Major, Op. 37 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 13 In C Minor, Op. 48 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 14 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 48 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 15 In F Minor, Op. 55 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 16 In E Flat Major, Op. 55 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 17 In B Major, Op. 62 No. 1
- Nocturne No. 18 In E Major, Op. 62 No. 2
- Nocturne No. 19 In E Minor, Op. 71 No. 1 (posth.)
Tracks:
- Waltz In A-Flat Major, Op. 34, No. 1
- Mazurka In F-Sharp Minor, Op. 6, No.1
- Mazurka In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 6, No.2
- Mazurka In E-Major, Op. 6, No.3
- Mazurka In E-Flat Major, Op.6, No.4
- Mazurka In B-Flat Major, Op. 7, No. 1
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. 7, No.2
- Mazurka In F-Minor, Op. 7, No. 3
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 7, No.4
- Mazurka In C-Major, Op. 7, No. 5
- Mazurka In B-Flat Major, Op. 17, No.1
- Mazurka In E-Minor, Op. 17, No. 2
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 17, No. 3
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. 17, No. 4
- Mazurka In G-Minor, Op. 24, No. 1
- Mazurka In C-Major, Op. 24, No. 2
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 24, No. 3
- Mazurka In B-Flat Minor, Op. 24, No. 4
- Mazurka In C-Minor, Op. 30, No. 1
- Mazurka In B-Minor, Op. 30, No. 2
- Mazurka In D-Flat Major, Op. 30, No. 3
- Mazurka In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 30, No. 4
- Mazurka In G-Sharp Minor, Op. 33, No. 1
- Mazurka In D-Major, Op. 33, No. 2
- Mazurka In C-Minor, Op. 33, No. 3
- Mazurka In B-Minor, Op. 33, No. 4
- Mazurka In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 41, No. 1
- Mazurka In E-Minor, Op. 41, No. 2
- Mazurka In B-Major, Op. 41, No. 3
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 42, No. 4
- Mazurka In G-Major, Op. 50, No. 1
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 50, No. 2
- Mazurka In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 50, No. 3
Tracks:
- Mazurka In B-Major, Op. 56, No. 1
- Mazurka In C-Major, Op. 56, No. 2
- Mazurka In C-Minor, Op. 56, No. 3
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. 59, No. 1
- Mazurka In A-Flat Major, Op. 56, No. 2
- Mazurka In F-Sharp Minor, Op. 56, No. 3
- Mazurka In B-Major, Op. 63, No. 1
- Mazurka In F-Minor, Op. 63, No. 2
- Mazurka In C-Sharp minor, Op. 63, No. 3
- Mazurka In G-Major, Op. 67, No. 1
- Mazurka In G-Minor, Op. 67, No. 2
- Mazurka In C-Major, Op. 67, No. 3
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. 67, No. 4
- Mazurka In C-Major, Op. 68, No. 1
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. 68, No. 2
- Mazurka In F-Major, Op. 68, No. 3
- Mazurka In F-Monor, Op. 68, No. 4
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. Posth. (A son ami Emile Gaillard)
- Mazurka In A-Minor, Op. posth. (Notre temps)
- Scherzi In B-Minor, Op. 20
- Scherzi In B-Flat Minor, Op. 31
- Scherzi In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 39
- Scherzi In E-Major, Op. 54
Tracks:
- Barcaolle In F-Sharp Major, Op. 60
- Berseuse In D-Flar Major
- Polonaise In C-Sharp Major, Op. 26, No. 1
- Polonaise In E-Flat Major, Op. 26, No.2
- Polonaise In A-Major, Op. 40, No. 1
- Polonaise In C-Minor, Op. 40, No. 2
- Polonaise In F-Sharp Major, Op. 44
- Polonaise In A-Flat Major, Op. 53 (Heroic)
- Polonaise In A-Flat Major, Op. 61 (Polonaise-Fantaisie)
- Andante splanato & polonaise brillante In E-Flat Major, Op. 22
Customer Reviews:
THE GREATEST OF CHOPIN PIANISTS.......2007-03-01
These are the earlier discs of Rubinstein's Chopin, recorded by HMV in London during the 1930's. It is less complete than his later recordings for RCA - no Sonatas, no Ballades, no Etudes. The sound is naturally of its time - but in many ways more natural than the sharply-lit, slightly edgy piano sound RCA favoured in the 50's and 60's. Nevertheless, these are the Chopin performances I return to most.
Rubinstein's natural affinity with Chopin is legendary. He seemed always able to capture precisely the right degree of rubato at exactly the right moment in these pieces. And he had a unique ability in his countryman's music to balance the lyrical with the impassioned, what seems completely spontaneous with what is clearly deeply considered. The Nocturnes here are, I think, the best you'll hear anywhere on disc. In the greatest of them - the Opp.37 & 48 sets, for example - Rubinstein gets the contrast between the dreamy nocturnal outer sections with the darker, more impassioned central sections just right. These are not salon miniatures in his hands but big works, if not in length then in content. And no-one can match Rubinstein in the elusive diversity of this complete set of Mazurkas. The two Concerti both have Barbirolli as the sympathetic conductor, following Rubinstein's lead in the ebb and flow of phrases and whole sections of these gorgeous and often maligned works. Interestingly the recording of Concerto No.2 (actually the first composed) dates from before the pianist's famous withdrawal from public performance to reconstruct his technique and his approach, that of Concerto No.1 from after. Perhaps one can detect a touch more maturity and refinement in his approach to the latter, but they are both ravishing performances.
Many of the performances on these 5 discs are the greatest Chopin you're likely to hear. And the ear soon adjusts to the somewhat old-fashioned recorded piano sound. This is a highly desirable set for any lover of Chopin and/or great piano playing.
The greatest interpretation.......2007-02-17
The interpretation is stunning. Mono - but no matter for solo piano - and a wee bit hissy but still quite superb.
Not such a great album.......2007-01-12
This album was recorded from records as you can hear the scratches and skips. Don't recommend it!
Love it........2006-06-22
This is my favorite album. I think that not even Rubinstein's later recordings attain this quality of musical involvment.
There is a fair amount of background noise, but the music helps to forget it rather quickly overall.
RECORDING QUALITY IS A FACTOR.......2005-02-10
Otherwise, I would have given 5 stars. The fact that these have a hiss (and you can practically hear him close the piano on several numbers) should be mentioned. I guess we are spoiled to audio quality, but this is an expensive collection and this fact was glaringly omitted. That said, I have enjoyed the recordings, in spite of the very audible hiss.
Average customer rating:
- Food for your Spirit
- An Antti Keisala Comment: Chopin Divine, Saddest Music In The World
- Arthur Rubenstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49)
- Hmmm...
- "A whole set of marvelous miniatures"
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Arthur Rubinstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49)
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Similar Items:
- The Rubinstein Collection Vol 47 - Chopin: Waltzes, Impromptus, Bolero
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ASIN: B000031WBV
Release Date: 2000-08-08 |
Tracks:
- Op. 9, No. 1, In B-Flat Minor
- Op. 9, No. 2 In E-Flat
- Op. 9, No. 3 In B
- Op. 15, No. 1 In F
- Op. 15, No.2 In F-Sharp
- Op. 15, No. 3 In G Minor
- Op. 27, No. 1 In C-Sharp Minor
- Op. 27, No. 2 In D-Flat
- Op. 32, No. 1 In B
- Op. 32, No. 2 In A-Flat
Tracks:
- Op. 37, No. 1 In G Minor
- Op. 37, No. 2 In G
- Op. 48, No. 1 In C Minor
- Op. 48, No. 2 In F-Sharp Minor
- Op. 55, No. 1 In F Minor
- Op. 55, No. 2 In E-Flat
- Op. 62, No. 1 In B
- Op. 62, No. 2 In E
- Op. 72, No. 1 In E Minor
Amazon.com
Despite Arthur Rubinstein's extroverted personality and open-hearted interpretive approach, his performances of Chopin's introspective, half-lit Nocturnes inspired him to some of his greatest recordings, as this, the last of his three traversals of the 19, amply demonstrates. His earlier recordings, from 1936-37 and 1949-50, have their admirers, but this set dating from 1965 and 1967 is superior for its interpretive depth and realistic stereo sound. It's a touch slower than the earlier versions, and Rubinstein's glorious tone color, mastery of shadings, and unerring sense of rubato help make these among his greatest recordings. He makes the music breathe as few others have; the melodies go straight to the heart thanks to subtle phrasing that wrings worlds of emotion without wallowing. That sense of naturalness and inevitability in his playing can be heard in every one of these 19 works. It makes the start of Op. 27, No. 1 deeply moving and inspires awe at the way he brings structural clarity to Op. 48, No. 1 without compromising its mood. Others may have equaled his achievement in one or another of these works, but as a set, this is inspired pianism. --Dan Davis
Customer Reviews:
Food for your Spirit.......2007-02-28
I love, love, love this moving collection! It is divinely inspired, celestial, heavenly, stirring, emotionally filling and guaranteed to transport you to a higher dimension...
An Antti Keisala Comment: Chopin Divine, Saddest Music In The World.......2007-02-09
Sometimes we feel we're unspeakably down: nights when you're exhausted by your daily routines and the dreamer in you wakes up in vain. Some people read romantic short stories. Some go to have long walks on the beach. When I'm blue, I either go running or watch Wong's "Chunking Express", some Tarkovsky or listen to the saddest music. To music most divine. That's this Rubinstein's interpretations of Chopin are high on that list, as they are on every other best-of list I've yet compiled.
Simply put, this is a masterly artist interpreting the most masterly artist of our time.
Chopin is, to me, the epitome of an artist who invests his whole soul to his music. A poet whose own poems start to shape his heart. Others can comment (and have already done so) on the technical aspects of either Chopin or Rubinstein's skill, but I merely wish to articulate how shocking his music is in how it bares the soul, how naked it is. In modern rock music, I've found Peter Gabriel to work this way, at least the Peter Gabriel of the untitled era, up to the album "Us". This is the greatest of commitment, almost a secret made between the composer and listener. The music approaches the listener in such a direct way not from the outside but from within. And this has nothing to do with who's playing the piano. There are simply passages that are larger than either the player or our comprehension. The silences, the rubatos, the relation of the notes to the mood of the thing, to the heart of the matter. Rubinstein just happens the most open-hearted, as one of the editorial reviews points out.
About Chopin. He's not like Bach in my books, whom I've found to appear emotionally majestic yet who's more like the Peter Greenaway of classical music; more showy and mathematical, calculating. Adhering to a certain cosmology rather than inventing and investing straight from and to the soul. Whereas Bach relies on framework in which he fills his music (this is, of course, the Zeitgeist of his time and style of music and in itself nothing remarkably revealing) with the finest of contrapuncts, Chopin's method is to create a free flow of melody, harmony, tempo and dynamics. It's organic and it's fluid. I don't think I should even mention Mozart's badinage. Rubinstein uses the rubato of Chopin to a great extent, which makes for some of the most breathtaking passages ever played on a piano. I play piano so badly I'll never have the possibility to play Chopin properly, but I've done the 'next best thing', that is, I've played him as transcribed for the guitar by Franscisco Tárrega. Those transcriptions, in my mind, contain that bittersweet chance of rubato, and that nakedness translates to the guitar quite well. But that's not the real thing.
This is. Of course, the best thing is to get all of Rubinstein's recordings, but if I was to make the hardest decision and choose only one, this would be it. Very close would be the Preludes as well as the Mazurkas, but this is perhaps the most heavenly music. Only Pärt's "Alina" continually reaches me on such a personal level. These songs made me believe that music can change your life.
Now I'm going to try and sell this item to you. Thus I'll have to ask that particular question: what is it about Rubinstein? We know him as the mastermind, the giant interpreter, who revolutionized how we listen to Chopin. But this isn't just merits, or otherwise he wouldn't be celebrated today for anything else than just showing a different path at the time. And this is a sad destiny some other artists share. Where Rubinstein triumphs is that his playing is much like what Chopin's music is like: it's a rare gift for us to find two artists with the same soul. This is why I think Rubinstein continues to be important and these records even life-altering. That's not in his technical skill, per se, it's in his ability to channel something from within, lift up something from the notes that can only be read between the lines. He's intimate, much like the music, and that's why I let him come close and do his best. Most beautiful music, most uplifting music; the saddest music in the world.
With best regards,
AK
Arthur Rubenstein - Chopin 19 Nocturnes (Vol. 49).......2007-01-21
Arthur Rubenstein interprets Chopin beautifully with great emotion. It would have been interesting, were it possible, to have him play these great works in the presence of Chopin to get his reaction. The "Red Seal" RCA label lives up to it reputation for having made some of the very best quality recordings ever made. The crisp, clear and true to the original sound makes you feel as though you were in the studio while the recording was being made.
Hmmm..........2006-12-04
Well, here's the good: Rubinstein is far more adept than you or I will ever be at interpreting these pieces. His playing is rich, yet rather restrained. A bit too restrained at times. Now then, the bad:
1. sound quality is in dire need of remastery. I can't emphasize that enough. While not as thick with background noise as the Cortot Box set recorded in the 30s and onward... It's still pretty thick, which bothers the hell out of me, making listening straight throughh almost impossible at times.
2: only 8 (!!!) of the minor key Nocturnes are accounted for. I'm sorry, but the minor key pieces are VASTLY more interesting and varied and sensual and full of sturm und drang than the major key pieces. Three are missing, though I'm too lazy to go picking through and find out which 3 they are. Still, that's about 1/4th of the minor key NOcturnes: unaccounted for.
That plus the issue of sound quality: I'll stick with my Claudio Arrau set, hushed breath and all, which I have had to purchase twice and which never fails to take me where I need to go.
I love the Rubins, but still: Buyer Beware.
"A whole set of marvelous miniatures".......2006-05-22
Although most of people tend to consider, Chopin' s Nocturnes as tearful salon pieces, they perhaps retains, with major effervescence than any other genre composed by him, the essential principles that support the Romantic mood. The night conceived as a frame for the febrile imagination, that may originate the most beautiful dreams or on the contrary the most horrid nightmares.
"Chopin loved the night and its soft mysteries as much as did Robert Louis Stevenson, and his nocturnes are true night pieces, some with agitated, remorseful countenance, others seen are whispering at dusk." ..."He ennobled the form originated by Field, giving it dramatic breadth, passion and even grandeur." These smart considerations belong to James Huneker (1860--1921) the famed author and music and drama critic.
Under this perspective any analysis around Chopin should be done according the specified genre you consider, due it would explain preconceived attitudes and superficial generalizations that frequently lead to trivial thoughts and originate distorted and deformed opinions around the egregious figure of the beloved Polish composer.
There have been three famed and renowned pianists that have shone with radiant splendor at the moment to play this set of Nocturnes. Of course that Rubinstein was one of them, (the others two are Samson Francois and Alfred Cortot), and the reason why they are above the most, resides in the fact they played every one of these works, with a special connotation and intimate atmosphere. As Huneker previously emphasized, every Nocturne has its particular blaze, texture, color, personality and expression.
So if you want to experiment a true experience listening this set of Nocturnes, don' t think it over and acquire it.
Average customer rating:
- There were greater talents.
- This Is No Lesson in Economics...
- CLASSICAL MUSIC AT ITS MOST EXPENSIVE (AND BEST)
- It's actually not so expensive
- A Superb Reissue
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The Rubinstein Collection (Limited Edition) [Box Set]
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ASIN: B00001O2XZ
Release Date: 1999-10-26 |
Amazon.com
A retail price of $1,600 for a box set? Granted, it's not something most of us can afford. But, for piano buffs and fans of Artur Rubinstein, this mammoth limited-edition 94-CD set might be an investment to consider. For starters, BMG has collected all of the approved studio recordings of Rubinstein (including 200 or so that have never been on CD) and added a handful of previously unreleased recordings and some interviews. The lot has been remastered for this collection using the latest technology (RCA's disc-and-a-half Highlights sampler actually showcases some of the more dramatic remasterings)--a good thing, when you consider that many of these master tapes have a lifetime's worth of surface noise. You get a lavishly illustrated book with essays and photographs and a nice case to store the works; everything but the credit plan is included, really. Of course, it's up to you to decide whether you want 706 recordings of 347 pieces played by the same great pianist. And, though owning Rubinstein's three complete cycles of Beethoven's concertos might sound tempting, will you really listen to each of them? Probably not, but if you need 'em, here they are. (His Chopin cycles, on the other hand, you will listen to repeatedly!) It's easily one of the most impressive and comprehensive box sets that classical music has seen: a true career overview with excellent remastering and handsome packaging that reflects the collection's price tag (unlike some box sets that are just that: CDs in boxes). Do you need it? Probably not. Will you want it? You bet. --Jason Verlinde
Customer Reviews:
There were greater talents........2005-05-30
I must confess that I hate Rubinstein's sound as a pianist, but his dedication and verve were notable. Think though of Claudio Aurru's gifts, remarkable... I feel that to love Rubinstein one must love a world of safe emotional borders and sameness; sorry A.R fans. jb
This Is No Lesson in Economics..........2004-10-10
It is a natural tendency when reviewing items in this price-point to contemplate cost-effectiveness first and foremost. Considering that CDs have no nutritional value and cannot keep kids off crack, I am uncomfortable recognizing, much less crossing, some line in the sand where space ordinarily reserved for record-reviews must yield to amateur musings on the evils of conspicuous consumption or macroeconomic conceptions of social justice. Let's assume for the moment that this box set is free, removing from our purview the materialistic thrill or global economic blight one might seek and/or wish to stave off in purchasing it.
Rubinstein's "official" recorded output is astounding. It spans 5 decades, and encompasses significant forays into the oeuvre of dozens of composers. Though technique is generally expected to decline with age, few pianists live to be 96 years old. Rubinstein the pianist and Rubinstein the musician reached their highest collective summit when Rubinstein the man was well into his 60s. The "late-bloomer" aspect of his career places a considerable quorum of his most polished recordings squarely within the stereo era. Some of this material had made its way onto CD prior to this release, most notably his Chopin. Unfortunately, Rubinstein's well-deserved public acclaim as Chopin's supreme torchbearer unjustly limits his reputation along "expresio unius est exclusio alterius" lines. For example, though Rubinstein chose to record only a small handful of Beethoven sonatas, it is doubtful that one might hear them better played, even by his Beethoven specialist contemporaries Schnabel and Kempff. Rubinstein also ardently championed French and Spanish music, and is said to have loved performing Brahms most of all. This release places many of his most accomplished recordings before the ears of the listening public for the first time since their original release on vinyl.
I am frequently intoxicated by the earliest recordings from the 30s and 40s. Some of them, like his first traversal of the Chopin scherzi, are bite-your-nails-til-they-bleed thrilling. On the other hand, the initial limitations of the recording process required this (and every) pianist to make bothersome compromises with respect to tempi and dynamics at times. Ultimately, it comes down to personal taste. I am more consistently drawn to Rubinstein the wise-master than Rubinstein the young Turk.
RCA invested undisclosed sums of time and money into restoring, remixing, and remastering all of the recordings for this release. Some of the earlier recordings have been available on CD for quite some time (e.g. Chopin's Op. 28 Preludes, the Ormandy/Philadelphia Grieg concerto). Despite the intervention of acoustical restorationist-par-excellence Ward Marston, the remastering undertaken in the course of this project has not dramatically improved the sound on these releases. Short of traveling several decades into the past and placing more sensitive microphones in more strategic locations, there was probably little else that could have been done. Marston's brilliance is far more obvious in restoring to near original luster many deteriorating tape recordings from the late 40s and early 50s. The stereo recordings also sound fuller.
I am pleased with my purchase because having access (and, most importantly, having listened to) all of these recordings is a moving experience. It allows me to contemplate this extraordinary artist as a man, whose performance is inevitably colored by the accumulation of experience, the expanding flexibility of the recording process, the onset of maturity, and (perhaps sadly) declining physical powers. There are multiple recordings of most pieces in this collection, but I rarely find it difficult to cull a favorite among them. At this point, I play some of the records frequently, and others rarely. If your aim is to hear Rubinstein at his best, this set provides the resources you need to make what are at turns obvious, and others hopelessly personal choices. This set includes detailed (and mostly newly written) liner notes for each record as a well as an engaging hardcover book providing no fewer than 3 complete indices to the recordings (by date of recording, Composer, and Volume number). The box itself is a work of art, looks stunning on a shelf, and never requires polishing. Most of the 81 volumes are sold separately, and have been made available for download on the Apple Music Store.
While I will not claim that Rubinstein's interpretations are equally effective, I cannot think of any other pianist, now living or forever deceased, who could approach such a broad repertoire with the unwaivering technical finesse and prophetic musicianship evident in the bulk of his recorded output. If you never see the likes of a "Rubinstein Collection" on the shelf again, do not dismiss it as another textbook illustration of price elasticity. To do so is to dwell on on the vagaries of consumerism when the more important issue is that the next Rubinstein may never be.
CLASSICAL MUSIC AT ITS MOST EXPENSIVE (AND BEST).......2003-05-30
You have two choices: Starve the kids or skip the mortgage payments for a month or two. How else can you afford this 94 (!) disc set that captures every studio recording the classical icon ever recorded. Trust us: The kids are fat enough.
It's actually not so expensive.......2001-06-06
Provided you have the time, listening to this collection not only helps you better appreciate Rubinstein's supreme talent but also gives you some idea of his unfolding genius--how his technique and interpretation changed through the years. There's enough room in music for every kind of interpretation, as long as you take the music first, and all the interpretations Rubinstein offered are interesting. Of course this set is expensive, but it's nearly 100 CDs plus liner notes, so the price is not that bad. Besides, if you decide to really listen to this set the way it deserves, it's going to be years before you buy another CD.
A Superb Reissue.......2000-04-30
A friend of mine was able to aquire the Rubinstein Collection and I have been borrowing from it liberally.
RCA deserves to be commended on going the extra mile and releasing ALL of the authorized Rubinstein recordings, well organized and superbly remastered in this comprehensive edition. Hopefully, RCA will also release the individual volumes for those who are not completists or who simply cannot afford the entire set. True, this set is at full price. A source who was connected with this reissure has told me that RCA planned to issue the set at mid price, but the cost of this mammoth edition went far overbudget--and the full price was dictated by their production costs. Certainly, the money was well spent. The ramastering, particularly in the earlier recordings, must be heard to be believed. The packaging, documentation, and liner notes are all first class.
It is fascinating to trace Rubinstein's evolution as an interpreter--from the devil-may-care early days through the mature recordings of the 1950s, into the 1970s, when his playing on record tended to be a bit cautions.
Hopefully, the cost of producing this magnum opus and the reported slow sales it has been getting will not deter RCA from producing more boxed sets of Horowitz and many of the other artists in the RCA vaults. Bravo, RCA!
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