Schubert: Piano Sonatas, D958, 959, 960

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Perahia's up against some heavy competition from the likes of Arrau, Brendel, Pollini, as well as old-timers like Schnabel and Edwin Fischer. Even in such company he acquits himself well, playing with lean sonority that clearly etches Schubert's melodic lines and clarifies the structure of these sprawling works. In the B-flat Sonata he clearly differentiates the basic tempos of the first two movements, which can often blend into each other by pianists who just play them as two slow movements. In the great Andantino movement of the A major, he's alive to its inherent weirdness as Schubert sends a nostalgically beautiful melody off the deep end to fragmentation, then reassembles it into a broken shadow of itself. His approach here is effective, if relatively restrained as he keeps to a generally classical view of works some turn into Romantic extravaganzas. Perahia's is a worthy addition to the Schubert discography and an excellent way to get fine performances of all three of these great works in one well-recorded, neatly space-saving package. --Dan Davis

Schubert: Piano Sonatas, D958, 959, 960, Music, Franz Schubert, Murray Perahia, Chamber Music & Recitals, Classical, Classical Composers, Classical Music, Keyboard, Romantic Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard
Schubert: Piano Sonatas, D958, 959, 960
Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
  • Talent and personality!
  • Beautiful, Solid Schubert
  • Murray Perahia is a Schubertian the equal of Kempff and Lupu
  • Schubert for the thinking man
  • Mature, thoughtful, beautifully-wrought late Schubert
Schubert: Piano Sonatas, D958, 959, 960

Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD

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Similar Items:
  1. Schubert: Impromptus For Piano
  2. Songs Without Words
  3. The Aldeburgh Recital
  4. Murray Perahia Plays Bach
  5. Handel/Scarlatti: Murray Perahia Plays Handel & Scarlatti

ASIN: B0000996FC
Release Date: 2003-05-13

Tracks:

  1. I. Allegro
  2. II. Adagio
  3. III. Menuetto. Allegro - Trio
  4. IV. Allegro
  5. I. Allegro
  6. II. Andantino
  7. III. Scherzo. Allegro Vivace - Trio. Un Poco Piu Lento
  8. IV. Rondo. Allegretto

Tracks:

  1. I. Molto Moderato
  2. II. Andante Sostenuto
  3. III. Scherzo. Allegro Vivace Con Delicatezza
  4. IV. Allegro Ma Non Troppo

Amazon.com

Perahia's up against some heavy competition from the likes of Arrau, Brendel, Pollini, as well as old-timers like Schnabel and Edwin Fischer. Even in such company he acquits himself well, playing with lean sonority that clearly etches Schubert's melodic lines and clarifies the structure of these sprawling works. In the B-flat Sonata he clearly differentiates the basic tempos of the first two movements, which can often blend into each other by pianists who just play them as two slow movements. In the great Andantino movement of the A major, he's alive to its inherent weirdness as Schubert sends a nostalgically beautiful melody off the deep end to fragmentation, then reassembles it into a broken shadow of itself. His approach here is effective, if relatively restrained as he keeps to a generally classical view of works some turn into Romantic extravaganzas. Perahia's is a worthy addition to the Schubert discography and an excellent way to get fine performances of all three of these great works in one well-recorded, neatly space-saving package. --Dan Davis

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Talent and personality!.......2006-03-27

Murray Perahia together with Van Cliburn may be well considered as the most remarkable exponents of talented generation of named American pianists who blossomed after the WW2, who knew to express with total naturalness and absolute spontaneity the Romantic accords. As you know the technical equipment was perhaps the main virtue, inculcated in his professional career. Toscanini in the orchestral conduction (without forget to Reiner), Heifetz in violin and Horowitz in the piano were the supreme musical Gods and became the last peak, the supreme perfection. If you notice for instance, the visible discontent of Toscanini at the moment to conduct the Adagios, you will agree the terrible and distorted vision that generated in most of musicians in progress. Stravinsky, Prokoviev and Bartok were much more closer for this young generation than Brahms or Beethoven. An impressive cloud of competitiveness surrounded all the possible spaces. From U.R.S.S. came Emil Gilels in the Fifties, a formidable artists but also a cold and analytical pianist, which accented still more this fashion tendency; and those European artists who seemed to be linked interms of the old fashion to play, were not precisely the main guests. And if you consider the fact that Van Cliburn has won the prestigious Tchaikovsky Festival in the extinct U.R.S.S. with that battle horse concert, the idea strengthened even more in the spirit and motivational approaches.

Of course there notable exceptions to rule as Earl Wild, Tureck, Kapell and the frist stage of Watts, but somehow they were in opposite flow. In this sense the merit of Murray Perahia is double, in this sense. He kept and nourished the Romantic tradition, till the time came for him to revitalize in the late Sixties, where the new tendencies were much more open minded.

And with the retirement of Van Cliburn at the middle Seventies from musical stages, Perahia and Wild remained as the last survivors of this tradition: Micahel Ponti decided to live in Europe and Raymond Lewenthal chose Paris after that painful incident with sa smuggler in Central Park.

That is among other virtues fundamental reasons to acquire this album. Perahia breathes and transmits that warmth in every one of his multiple records.

5 out of 5 stars Beautiful, Solid Schubert.......2004-08-27

Murray Perahia has established himself as one of today's most compellingly lyrical pianists. This recording of Schubert's last three piano sonatas is no exception. Perahia, while in possession of a beautiful basic tone, uses his mastery of color to accentuate Schubert's subtle and often somber changes of mood and expression. This in fact is probably Perahia's strong point--that he follows exactly what is written in the score while making a poignant statement rather than blindly following the composer's instructions. He executes extremely well. This also may be a drawback to this set, that it lacks a certain spontaneity. However, this is not extremely dramatic, spontaneous music, and Perahia's style fits it well. He handles the bigger moments in the sonatas well, such as the second movement of the A Major Sonata. He will never be the pianist to go to for the Liszt b minor sonata, but that is fine because Perahia is playing Schubert as opposed to Liszt.

5 out of 5 stars Murray Perahia is a Schubertian the equal of Kempff and Lupu.......2004-03-20

I am a big fan of Murray Perahia. I have quite a number of his recordings in my collection. His recordings of the Schubert Impromptus and this collection of the Posthumous Sonatas are wonderful examples of his art.

His interpretations have the healthy outlook and vibrant life force of Artur Rubinstein; yet have the vision of Artur Schnabel. He really is a perfect pianist. (If there is such a thing).

If your'e reading this Mr. Perahia, please do us all a favor, and give consideration to recording all of the complete Schubert Sonatas. It would be a great set!!!

5 out of 5 stars Schubert for the thinking man.......2003-12-16

The late Schubert sonatas are to the pianist what the Bach Partitas & Sonatas are to the violinist --- works that cannot be approached casually, and which require a certain maturity on the part of the artist. With these recordings, Perahia demonstrates his continuing maturity as an artist in recent years.

Perahia allows the music to unfold on its own accord, something which is crucial for Schubert's late instrumental works. His tempi & dynamics are careful & measured, for he knows exactly what each sonata individually requires. The sometimes extreme dynamics of D959, for example, would be wildly out of place in D960. The 1st movement of D958 requires a very steady pace & crescendi that are gradual but not hurried. It is far too easy to let the tempo & dynamics get the better of the artist, but Perahia clearly has control over this.

Throughout all three sonatas, Perahia's tone is sustained and natural, of the most reflective & thoughtful nature. These performances certainly stand up favorably in comparison to the much-ballyhooed series of Uchida, as well as the classic Brendel recordings. This is a crucial recording for those who want to explore the full complexities & nuances of the late Schubert sonatas.

5 out of 5 stars Mature, thoughtful, beautifully-wrought late Schubert.......2003-11-17

This is the second time that Perahia has recorded the middle of these three late sonatas, the well-loved Sonata in A, D. 959. I bought the 2 CD set primarily to hear what he might have to say some 13 years after the original recording. And I was concerned about his technical assurance after several years of physical problems with his hands. I needn't have worried on that account. If anything this reading is more olympian, more assured, more elegant. Earlier reviewers here have asked for more fire. Not I. I want these sonatas to sound like they were handed down from God--as they may have been, who knows?--and in that Perahia succeeds. Just listen to the final movement, the Rondo, of the A major sonata--the one made familiar to millions in an orchestrated version that was the themesong of the popular US sitcom, 'Wings.' I have never heard such songful playing from anyone--this includes Brendel, Goode, Uchida--which is certainly apt for Schubert, our most inspired writer of song melodies. When I got to that fourth movement I hit the repeat button and played it four times in a row, I was so enthralled. Coupled with that is the elfin leggiero of the movement preceding it--almost Mendelssohnian. This is spectacular playing AND spectacular thinking about this great music.

The less-familiar C minor sonata, D. 958--and it is less familiar because it is just a hairbreadth less heavenly than its successors--has a convincing case made for it by Perahia. He does this by emphasizing the ceremonial aspects of the piece--'This is Important Stuff'--by de-emphasizing the corny Alberti-bass recurrences of the accompaniment, using a consistently full but rounded tone, and drawing our attention to the rock-solid formal construction. Hewn from granite, this music.

Many people's favorite Schubert sonata is the final Sonata in B flat major, D. 960. They need not fear that Perahia will distort or underplay its grandeurs. There is a temptation in this sonata to overemphasize the mystery presaged by that ominous low-bass G-flat trill in the opening measures. My own take on that trill, and those that follow it, is that they are primarily harmonic devices, preparing us for the way Schubert takes us far afield. Yes, they are mysterious but they become less and less so, even dying out without a whimper eventually. Perhaps this is a triumph of light over dark? Who knows what Schubert had in mind. As Perahia plays--in unfailingly beautiful tone, be it said--one is not made uneasy by all this, rather one is exalted--by the beauty of the themes, the odd rightness of the unusual harmonies, by the inevitability of the form; the latter is the kind of thing that makes you go 'Of COURSE!' when the form is finally laid out, but it is not easily predicted beforehand. The Andante sostenuto is, to my mind, the most Beethovenian of Schubert's slow movements, and it is given that kind of solemnity and substance by Perahia. The Scherzo that follows comes as an emotional relief from the seriousness of the Andante; Perahia is not often considered to be much of a jokester, but he makes this movement chuckle. The closing Rondo is played with a straight-face, but occasionally hears Perahia (and, of course, Schubert) smiling. And most of all, it dances. An unusually satisfying traversal.

I have liked Brendel's recordings, also Uchida's and Goode's. But at least for now these by Perahia are my favorites.

This 2 CD set has about 112 minutes of music--roughly the amount one would get these days on 1 1/2 CDs--and the price reflects that; that is, one pays about 1 1/2 times what one would pay for one full-price CD. One last word: the booklet notes by Charles Fisk are elegantly written and more informative than most.

Recommended without reservations.

Scott Morrison

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