Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
with Artur Schnabel
2. Piano Sonata No. 29 in B flat major ("Hammerklavier") Op. 106
Composed by Ludwig van Beethoven
with Artur Schnabel
Beethoven: The Complete Piano Sonatas, Vol. 1,Ludwig van Beethoven,Artur Schnabel,Enterprise,Classical,Keyboard,Romantic Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard
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Beethoven: Die Verliebte - Sonatas Op 7; Op 10 Nos 1-3 (Complete Works for Solo Piano Vol 3) /Brautigam
Manufacturer: Bis ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000H4VVPM Release Date: 2006-08-29 |
Customer Reviews:
Another winner from Brautigam's Beethoven sonata series.......2006-10-12
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Beethoven: Early Vienna Sonatas - Sonatas Op. 2, Nos. 1-3; Op. 29, Nos. 1-2 (Complete Works for Solo Piano Vol 2) /Brautigam
Manufacturer: Bis ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AYYTC6 Release Date: 2005-09-27 |
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Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas, Vol. 1
Manufacturer: Classica D'oro ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005NHKY Release Date: 2001-09-04 |
Customer Reviews:
Very Poor Transfer.......2003-03-18
But the transfer here is very poor indeed despite the fact that I have been listening to quite a lot of historic recordings like Busoni on the piano, the Liszt's Pupils, Schnabel/Szegeti, Busch/Serkin, Bartok, Rachmaninoff on the piano... etc but none is more unacceptable than this one even in view of it's low price. Go for other versions.
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Beethoven: Piano Sonatas (Complete), Vol. 1 (Box Set)
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000013I7 Release Date: 1994-02-15 |
Tracks:
- Grave - Allegro Di Molto E Con Brio
- Adagio Cantabile
- Rondo: Allegro
- Adagio Sostenuto
- Allegretto
- Presto
- Allegro Assai
- Andante Con Moto
- Allegro Ma Non Troppo - Presto
Tracks:
- Allegro
- Adagio
- Menuetto. Allegretto
- Prestissimo
- Allegro Vivace
- Largo Appassionato
- Scherzo. Allegretto
- Rondo. Grazioso
- Allegro Con Brio
- Adagio
- Scherzo. Allegro
- Allegro Assai
Tracks:
- Allegro Molto E Con Brio
- Adagio Molto
- Finale: Prestissimo
- Allegro
- Allegretto
- Presto
- Presto
- Largo E Mesto
- Menuetto. Allegro
- Rondo. Allegro
- Presto Alla Tedesca
- Andante
- Vivace
Tracks:
- Andante Con Variazioni
- Scherzo. Allegro Molto
- Marcia Funebre Sulla Morte D'Un Eroe
- Allegro
- Allegro Vivace
- Adagio Grazioso
- Rondo. Allegretto
- Allegro
- Scherzo. Allegretto Vivace
- Menuetto. Moderato E Grazioso
- Presto Con Fuoco
Tracks:
- Allegro Con Brio
- Adagio Con Molta Expressione
- Menuetto
- Rondo. Allegretto
- Allegro
- Scherzo. Assai Vivace - Presto - Tempo I
- Adagio Sostenuto. Appassionato E Con Molto Sentimento
- Largo - Allegro
- Allegro Risoluto. Fuga E Tre Voci, con Alcune Licenze
Customer Reviews:
Great sound quality and performance!.......2006-11-27
Other sets worth exploring:
Schnabel (EMI) - essential.
O'Conor (Telarc) - a mellow way to view the sonatas, and a great alternative to Jando.
Beethoven would approve!.......2004-06-07
I also would recommend these sets even if they cost three times as much, especially when the playing can easily compete with full-priced sets.
Stylistically, the performances are amazingly consistent from sonata no. 1 to sonata 32. Jando's interpretations tends to be honest rather than ego driven (you hear more of what Beethoven wanted, and less from the messenger) and taking nearly every repeat.
Like the reviewer before me, I also read along with the scores and I too was amazed by how precisely Jeno Jando sticks to Beethoven`s markings. Bravo!!
The only other complete set that I have is Schnabels on EMI. These Naxos sets are the first ones in many years, out of many boxes, that I felt are worth keeping as well.
Jeno Jando's Beethoven on Naxos is a great deal, at any price.
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Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas, Vol. 3
Manufacturer: Classica D'oro ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00005QC5Q Release Date: 2001-11-06 |
Tracks:
- Pno Son No.20 in G, op.49 No.2: Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- Pno Son No.20 in G, op.49 No.2: Tempo Di Menuetto
- Pno Son No.16 in G, Op.31 No.1: Allegro Vivace
- Pno Son No.16 in G, Op.31 No.1: Adagio Grazioso
- Pno Son No.16 in G, Op.31 No.1: Rondo: Allegretto
- Pno Son No.17 in d, Op.31 No.2 'The Tempest': Largo-Allegro
- Pno Son No.17 in d, Op.31 No.2 'The Tempest': Adagio
- Pno Son No.17 in d, Op.31 No.2 'The Tempest': Allegretto
- Pno Son No.18 in E flat, Op.31 No.3: Allegro
- Pno Son No.18 in E flat, Op.31 No.3: Scherzo: Allegretto Vivace
- Pno Son No.18 in E flat, Op.31 No.3: Menuetto: Moderato E Grazioso
- Pno Son No.18 in E flat, Op.31 No.3: Presto Con Fuoco
Tracks:
- Pno Son No.19 in g, Op.49 No.1: Andante
- Pno Son No.19 in g, Op.49 No.1: Rondo: Allegro
- Pno Son No.21 in C, Op.53 'Waldstein': Allegro Con Brio
- Pno Son No.21 in C, Op.53 'Waldstein': Adagio Molto
- Pno Son No.21 in C, Op.53 'Waldstein': Rondo: Allegro Moderato
- Pno Son No.22 in F, Op.54: In Tempo D'un Menuetto
- Pno Son No.22 in F, Op.54: Allegretto
- Pno Son No.23 in f, Op.57 'Appassionata': Allegro Assai
- Pno Son No.23 in f, Op.57 'Appassionata': Andante Con Moto
- Pno Son No.23 in f, Op.57 'Appassionata': Allegro Ma Non Troppo
- Pno Son No.26 in E flat, Op.81a 'Les Adieux': Adagio-Allegro
- Pno Son No.26 in E flat, Op.81a 'Les Adieux': Andante Espressivo
- Pno Son No.26 in E flat, Op.81a 'Les Adieux': Vivacissimamente
Customer Reviews:
Brilliant Performances -- Terrible Sound.......2001-12-31
These CD transfers are really bad. I know they're cheap, but they are no bargain, because the music is ruined. At times the sound is just a little muffled and distant (which I could live with to save a few bucks) but then there are passages that sound like you are listening through a garden hose or something. Ack!
Save up and buy the Pearl sets - they sound wonderful (some hiss, but these ARE 78s after all). I did a comparison using this CD and the Pearl 'Named Sonatas' sampler and the differences were astonishing. I've not heard the EMI set, which may lie in between sound-wise just as it does price-wise, but I'm still voting for the Pearl sets. Start with the sampler if you have reservations, but check them out!
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Beethoven: Piano Sonatas Complete Vol. 8
Manufacturer: Hungaroton ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000009OEO Release Date: 1998-10-21 |
Tracks:
- Son in c, Op.10 No 1: I. Molto Allegro
- Son in c, Op.10 No 1: II. Adagio Molto
- Son in c, Op.10 No 1: III. Finale. Prestissimo
- Son in C 'Waldstein': Op.53: I. Allegro Con Brio
- Son in C 'Waldstein': Op.53 : II. Intro. Adagio Molto/Attacca Subito
- Son in C 'Waldstein': Op.53: III. Rondo. Allegretto Moderato/Prestissimo
- Son in E flat, Op.7: I. Molto Allegro
- Son in E flat, Op.7: II. Largo Con Gran Espressione
- Son in E flat, Op.7: III. Allegro
- Son in E flat, Op.7: IV. Rondo. Poco Allegretto
Customer Reviews:
Annie fischer's Beethoven Piano Sonatas.......2007-01-13
That is perhaps the simplest way I can explain why I love these CDs. No other set I know (save, perhaps, Schnabel's) satisfied me, whatever fine qualities it might possess. I am thinking of Kempff, Goode, Roberts, Frank, Kuerti, Brendel, Kovacevich, Arrau, Perl, and Gulda, all of whose sets I have owned and listened to for years and then either given away or sold, because I could not hear in them the full range of states I know are expressed in the Beethoven sonatas. Besides Fischer, Schnabel alone has the spiritual depth and intellectual power to bring forth all the meaning of those phases of existence, yet the sound is distracting and there are a few occasions where he seems to put showmanship before communication. To make it even simpler, I will say that if, like me, you find Furtwangler's interpretation of the Beethoven symphonies (particularly those recorded during the war) revelatory in a way that no other performance has yet matched, then Fischer is to the sonatas what Furtwangler is to the symphonies. (If you don't know Furtwangler's recordings, more's the pity. They are available from Music & Arts.)
A more complicated way to explain would be to discuss the differences in cultural life (and therefore all life) wrought by what Walter Benjamin called "the age of mechanical reproduction," when recordings and reprints have flooded the world with what Lyotard calls "simulacra" of reality, so that we feel as though we have had an experience, though there are no emotional or intellectual traces of it left afterward. Fischer somehow avoided being caught up in "the concert industry," so her performances were genuine communal experiences between the composer, the performer, and the audience (not the empty gestures of practiced automata, like our prolific technical miracles). What's more amazing is that through what must have been an incredibly painstaking process of "patching in" (much like what Glenn Gould explains he did in his great Bach recordings), over several years and contrary to her own predilection Fischer managed to recreate that experience in the isolation of the recording studio so that we who never heard her in performance can nevertheless participate in it.
I was briefly tempted to try to justify some of my claims about Fischer's set by analysis, but even if I were adequate to the task it's absurd in this forum, so I will just baldly make the claims, and you may accept or reject them as you wish. First, Fischer understands and conveys the meaning of virtually every phrase, every contrapuntal line, every harmonic development, every dynamic contrast in a way that is nothing short of revelatory. Second, she plays with something like the range of touches, colors, expressions that were attributed by listeners to Beethoven's own playing, so that she has the heartbreaking delicacy of the adagio in op. 110 and the heaven-storming thunder of the allegro in op. 57, as well as everything in between. Third, the sound is finally adequate to the vision, amazingly "present" and beautiful, never diffuse or hazy, but really in the same room. Fourth, the packaging is beautiful, each CD in a paper sleeve accompanied by a fine booklet in English, French, German, and Hungarian, all contained in a super-slim high quality box. I am deeply grateful to Hungaraton (apparently now a subsidiary of Sony) for making this set available.
Of course, the price is very high, though I was able to find it new at Video Warehouse and at Best Prices for just over $100. If, like me, you love this music, you will likely feel that it is well worth it.
Eureka!.......2002-12-19
Until now. I can tell you from my heart that, virtually without fail, every movement of every one of these sonatas had me out of my seat, fist in the air, shouting "Brava!" These are, for me, the most satisfying performances of any music in the whole range of music. Not only are they, as the notes attest, peerless, they are priceless.
All who brought these recordings to fruition are to be deeply thanked. I have to think that Beethoven himself could not but smile, were he to hear these wonderful performances. Playing like this cannot have happened since he was alive.
To the memory of Annie Fischer, and to the kind folks at Hungaroton: Bravissima!
Grace and Power.......2001-06-30
In a class by itself - Just like Schnabel!.......2001-05-05
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Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas, Vol.9
Manufacturer: Hungaroton ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000DDML Release Date: 1998-11-01 |
Tracks:
- Son in G, Op.79: I. Presto Alla Tedesca
- Son in G, Op.79: II. Andante
- Son in G, Op.79: III. Vivace
- Son in g, Op.49, No.1: I. Andante
- Son in g, Op.49, No.1: II. Rondo. Allegro
- Son in E flat, Op.81a: I. Das Lebewohl-Adagio. Allegro
- Son in E flat, Op.81a: II. Abwesenheit-Andante Espressivo
- Son in E flat, Op.81a: III. Das Wiedersehn-Vivacissimente Im Lebhaftsten Zeitmasse
- Son in B flat, Op.22: I. Allegro Con Brio
- Son in B flat, Op.22: II. Adagio Con Molto Espressione
- Son in B flat, Op.22: III. Minuetto
- Son in B flat, Op.22: IV. Rondo. Allegretto
- Son in F, Op.54: I. In Tempo D'un Minuetto
- Son in F, Op.54: II. Allegretto
Customer Reviews:
Annie Fischer's Beethoven Piano Sonatas.......2007-01-13
That is perhaps the simplest way I can explain why I love these CDs. No other set I know (save, perhaps, Schnabel's) satisfied me, whatever fine qualities it might possess. I am thinking of Kempff, Goode, Roberts, Frank, Kuerti, Brendel, Kovacevich, Arrau, Perl, and Gulda, all of whose sets I have owned and listened to for years and then either given away or sold, because I could not hear in them the full range of states I know are expressed in the Beethoven sonatas. Besides Fischer, Schnabel alone has the spiritual depth and intellectual power to bring forth all the meaning of those phases of existence, yet the sound is distracting and there are a few occasions where he seems to put showmanship before communication. To make it even simpler, I will say that if, like me, you find Furtwangler's interpretation of the Beethoven symphonies (particularly those recorded during the war) revelatory in a way that no other performance has yet matched, then Fischer is to the sonatas what Furtwangler is to the symphonies. (If you don't know Furtwangler's recordings, more's the pity. They are available from Music & Arts.)
A more complicated way to explain would be to discuss the differences in cultural life (and therefore all life) wrought by what Walter Benjamin called "the age of mechanical reproduction," when recordings and reprints have flooded the world with what Lyotard calls "simulacra" of reality, so that we feel as though we have had an experience, though there are no emotional or intellectual traces of it left afterward. Fischer somehow avoided being caught up in "the concert industry," so her performances were genuine communal experiences between the composer, the performer, and the audience (not the empty gestures of practiced automata, like our prolific technical miracles). What's more amazing is that through what must have been an incredibly painstaking process of "patching in" (much like what Glenn Gould explains he did in his great Bach recordings), over several years and contrary to her own predilection Fischer managed to recreate that experience in the isolation of the recording studio so that we who never heard her in performance can nevertheless participate in it.
I was briefly tempted to try to justify some of my claims about Fischer's set by analysis, but even if I were adequate to the task it's absurd in this forum, so I will just baldly make the claims, and you may accept or reject them as you wish. First, Fischer understands and conveys the meaning of virtually every phrase, every contrapuntal line, every harmonic development, every dynamic contrast in a way that is nothing short of revelatory. Second, she plays with something like the range of touches, colors, expressions that were attributed by listeners to Beethoven's own playing, so that she has the heartbreaking delicacy of the adagio in op. 110 and the heaven-storming thunder of the allegro in op. 57, as well as everything in between. Third, the sound is finally adequate to the vision, amazingly "present" and beautiful, never diffuse or hazy, but really in the same room. Fourth, the packaging is beautiful, each CD in a paper sleeve accompanied by a fine booklet in English, French, German, and Hungarian, all contained in a super-slim high quality box. I am deeply grateful to Hungaraton (apparently now a subsidiary of Sony) for making this set available.
Of course, the price is very high, though I was able to find it new at Video Warehouse and at Best Prices for just over $100. If, like me, you love this music, you will likely feel that it is well worth it.
Can't stop listening.......2004-04-15
This album contains two "sonatinas" that hardly sound slight in AF's hands; the "grande sonata" Op. 22, the first one published after LvB completed his early set of quartets; the popular "Les Adieux"; and the neglected Op. 54, played here (as the culmination of the whole series) with such brilliance as to leave no doubt that it is a contemporary of the "Waldstein" and "Appassionata". AF plays each of these like there is no tomorrow. Forget about all those guys with the Steinways: this lady with the Bosendorfer leaves 'em all on the shelf.
This whole series of recordings must be experienced. I have been collecting for thirty years and I know of no other performances that keep me coming back again and again, and leave me so awestruck every time. These are my most cherished recordings.
Eureka!.......2002-12-19
Until now. I can tell you from my heart that, virtually without fail, every movement of every one of these sonatas had me out of my seat, fist in the air, shouting "Brava!" These are, for me, the most satisfying performances of any music in the whole range of music. Not only are they, as the notes attest, peerless, they are priceless.
All who brought these recordings to fruition are to be deeply thanked. I have to think that Beethoven himself could not but smile, were he to hear these wonderful performances. Playing like this cannot have happened since he was alive.
To the memory of Annie Fischer, and to the kind folks at Hungaroton: Bravissima!
Beethoven at it's Best.......2001-06-30
Inn a class by itself - Just like Schnabel!.......2001-05-05
Average customer rating:
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Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas Vol. 5
Manufacturer: Hungaroton ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000030B2 Release Date: 1998-10-21 |
Tracks:
- Son in e, Op. 90: Con Vivacita E Sempre Con Senitmento Ed Espressione
- Son in e, Op. 90: Non Troppo Vivace E Cantabile Assai
- Son in E, Op. 14 No. 1: Allegro
- Son in E, Op. 14 No. 1: Allegretto
- Son in E, Op. 14 No. 1: Rondo/Allegro Commodo
- Son in c#, Op. 27 No. 2: Adagio Sostenuto
- Son in c#, Op. 27 No. 2: Allegretto
- Son in c#, Op. 27 No. 2: Presto Agitato
- Son in A, Op. 101: Allegretto Ma Non Troppo Con Intimissimo Sentimento
- Son in A, Op. 101: Vivace Alla Marcia
- Son in A, Op. 101: Adagio Ma Non Troppo/Con Affetto
- Son in A, Op. 101: Allegro Ma Non Troppo/E Con Fermezza
Customer Reviews:
Annie Fischer's Beethoven Piano Sonatas.......2007-01-13
That is perhaps the simplest way I can explain why I love these CDs. No other set I know (save, perhaps, Schnabel's) satisfied me, whatever fine qualities it might possess. I am thinking of Kempff, Goode, Roberts, Frank, Kuerti, Brendel, Kovacevich, Arrau, Perl, and Gulda, all of whose sets I have owned and listened to for years and then either given away or sold, because I could not hear in them the full range of states I know are expressed in the Beethoven sonatas. Besides Fischer, Schnabel alone has the spiritual depth and intellectual power to bring forth all the meaning of those phases of existence, yet the sound is distracting and there are a few occasions where he seems to put showmanship before communication. To make it even simpler, I will say that if, like me, you find Furtwangler's interpretation of the Beethoven symphonies (particularly those recorded during the war) revelatory in a way that no other performance has yet matched, then Fischer is to the sonatas what Furtwangler is to the symphonies. (If you don't know Furtwangler's recordings, more's the pity. They are available from Music & Arts.)
A more complicated way to explain would be to discuss the differences in cultural life (and therefore all life) wrought by what Walter Benjamin called "the age of mechanical reproduction," when recordings and reprints have flooded the world with what Lyotard calls "simulacra" of reality, so that we feel as though we have had an experience, though there are no emotional or intellectual traces of it left afterward. Fischer somehow avoided being caught up in "the concert industry," so her performances were genuine communal experiences between the composer, the performer, and the audience (not the empty gestures of practiced automata, like our prolific technical miracles). What's more amazing is that through what must have been an incredibly painstaking process of "patching in" (much like what Glenn Gould explains he did in his great Bach recordings), over several years and contrary to her own predilection Fischer managed to recreate that experience in the isolation of the recording studio so that we who never heard her in performance can nevertheless participate in it.
I was briefly tempted to try to justify some of my claims about Fischer's set by analysis, but even if I were adequate to the task it's absurd in this forum, so I will just baldly make the claims, and you may accept or reject them as you wish. First, Fischer understands and conveys the meaning of virtually every phrase, every contrapuntal line, every harmonic development, every dynamic contrast in a way that is nothing short of revelatory. Second, she plays with something like the range of touches, colors, expressions that were attributed by listeners to Beethoven's own playing, so that she has the heartbreaking delicacy of the adagio in op. 110 and the heaven-storming thunder of the allegro in op. 57, as well as everything in between. Third, the sound is finally adequate to the vision, amazingly "present" and beautiful, never diffuse or hazy, but really in the same room. Fourth, the packaging is beautiful, each CD in a paper sleeve accompanied by a fine booklet in English, French, German, and Hungarian, all contained in a super-slim high quality box. I am deeply grateful to Hungaraton (apparently now a subsidiary of Sony) for making this set available.
Of course, the price is very high, though I was able to find it new at Video Warehouse and at Best Prices for just over $100. If, like me, you love this music, you will likely feel that it is well worth it.
Eureka!.......2002-12-19
Until now. I can tell you from my heart that, virtually without fail, every movement of every one of these sonatas had me out of my seat, fist in the air, shouting "Brava!" These are, for me, the most satisfying performances of any music in the whole range of music. Not only are they, as the notes attest, peerless, they are priceless.
All who brought these recordings to fruition are to be deeply thanked. I have to think that Beethoven himself could not but smile, were he to hear these wonderful performances. Playing like this cannot have happened since he was alive.
To the memory of Annie Fischer, and to the kind folks at Hungaroton: Bravissima!
Desert Island Beethoven.......2001-06-30
In a class by itself - just like Schnabel!.......2001-05-05
Average customer rating:
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Beethoven: The Complete Violin Sonatas, Vol. 2
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000041CS Release Date: 1996-01-23 |
Tracks:
- Sonata No. 6 In A, Op. 30 No. 1 For Piano And Violin: 1. Allegro
- Sonata No. 6 In A, Op. 30 No. 1 For Piano And Violin: 2. Adagio
- Sonata No. 6 In A, Op. 30 No. 1 For Piano And Violin: 3. Allegretto con variazioni
- Sonata No. 7 In C Minor, Op. 30 No. 2 For Piano And Violin: 1. Allegro con brio
- Sonata No. 7 In C Minor, Op. 30 No. 2 For Piano And Violin: 2. Adagio cantabile
- Sonata No. 7 In C Minor, Op. 30 No. 2 For Piano And Violin: 3. Scherzo. Allegro
- Sonata No. 7 In C Minor, Op. 30 No. 2 For Piano And Violin: 4. Finale. Allegro
- Sonata No. 8 In G, Op. 30 No. 3 For Piano And Violin: 1. Allegro assai
- Sonata No. 8 In G, Op. 30 No. 3 For Piano And Violin: 2. Tempo di menuetto ma molto moderato e grazioso
- Sonata No. 8 In G, Op. 30 No. 3 For Piano And Violin: 3. Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- Sonata No. 9 In A, Op. 47 For Piano And Violin 'Kreutzer': 1. Adagio sostenuto - Presto
- Sonata No. 9 In A, Op. 47 For Piano And Violin 'Kreutzer': 2. Andante con variazioni
- Sonata No. 9 In A, Op. 47 For Piano And Violin 'Kreutzer': 3. Finale. Presto
- Sonata No. 10 In G, Op. 96 For Piano And Violin: 1. Allegro moderato
- Sonata No. 10 In G, Op. 96 For Piano And Violin: 2. Adagio espressivo
- Sonata No. 10 In G, Op. 96 For Piano And Violin: 3. Scherzo. Allegro
- Sonata No. 10 In G, Op. 96 For Piano And Violin: 4. Poco allegretto
Customer Reviews:
Amazing!.......2005-03-05
So I bought the Perlman/Askenazy 5/9 disk for my two favorites, and this disk for 6,7, & 10 (because I'm too cheap to by the whole Perlman/Ashkenazy Beethovin V. Sonata collection).
Guess what? Big surprise! I can't get the Haebler/Szeryng disks out of my player...unless it's to put them into my portable player, including & especially for the Kreutzer! In other words Haebler/Szeryng are GREAT!!!
Ok, this isn't telling the true audiophile much. There's no point in my discussing tempo, passion, inflection, or even recording quality, since beauty is in the ear of the beholder. But I will say this:
My immediate plan after posting this is to buy the rest of Haebler/Szeryng's Beethoven V. Sonata collection (Vol. 1)...before YOU can get it!
Beethoven's Middle and Late Violin Sonatas.......2004-01-07
The best-known work on this CD is Beethoven's ninth sonata in A, opus 47, the "Kreutzer" sonata. Beethoven dedicated this sonata, written in 1803, to a famous violinist, Rudolphe Kreutzer, who never played it. (Originally Beethoven dedicated the work to a violinist named Bridgetower who premiered the work with the composer at the piano. Beethoven withdrew the dedication after he and Bridgetower quarreled over a woman.) The Kreutzer is a flamboyant, virtuosic work of Beethoven's middle period. It features a lengthy opening movement full of double stops on the violin, challenging duels between the instruments and sweeping arpeggios on the piano. The middle movement is a contrasting and florid set of variations and the finale is a sweeping tarantelle that Beethoven originally composed for the first of the opus 30 violin sonatas. Some people hear this work as a musical recreation of the war between the sexes. Indeed, Tolstoy wrote a famous story, "The Kreutzer Sonata" on this theme. This is powerful, passionate music beautifully performed by Szeryng and Haebler and will undoubtedly lead many listeners to this set.
But there is much more to this collection than the Kreutzer. The remaining four sonatas on this collection are less well-known than is the Kreutzer but provide equally splendid, if different musical experiences. The listener will enjoy exploring these lesser-known compositions.
I was particularly impressed with Beethoven's final sonata for violin and piano, no. 10, in G. major opus 96. This four-movement work dates from 1812 and Beethoven dedicated it to a French violinist named Pierre Rode. The work lies on the border between Beethoven's second and third compositional periods. Unlike the Kreutzer, this is a subdued, quiet work, but one of great beauty and depth. The work opens with a short melodic phrase in the violin which is developed exquisitely in the movement between the two instruments. There is a lovely passage in thirds in the piano followed by a long, lyrical melody in the violin. The second movement opens with a long, chorale-like singing theme in the piano followed by a beautiful duet between the instruments. The third movement is a short minor-key scherzo and the fourth movement is a set of variations on a simple comic-opera like theme. Listeners who fall in love with this music may want to read Maynard Solomon's essay, "Pastoral Rhetoric, Structure: the Violin Sonata in G op. 96" in his book "Late Beethoven: Music, Thought and Imagination" (2003). Much as I love the Kreutzer, the opus 96 is probably the finest of Beethoven's ten sonatas for piano and violin.
The three violin and piano sonatas, opus 30, date from 1802 and invite comparison with the three contemporaneous piano sonatas of opus 31 (which include the "Tempest" sonata). Each of these three sonatas has its own character and the listener will enjoy hearing all of them. The first of the set is a three-movement work in A major. This is quiet, lyrical music. The "tarantelle" that Beethoven initially wrote to conclude this work would not fit well with the prior two movements. One can understand Beethoven using it as the finale for the Kreutzer and substituting a quieter concluding movement.
The second sonata in C-minor, in four movements, is the best known of the opus 30 set. Again, it opens with a short four-note piano figure which is developed into a movement of great force. There is much lyricism in this movement together with the passion attendant upon the C-minor key. The second movement is a long, slow theme first stated by the piano. There is a brief scherzo with a bubbly trio followed by a concluding rondo in the minor. The work ends on a fiery note.
The third opus 30 sonata is in G and is short and lively. It opens with a growling, swirling figure in the piano that again forms the basis for lengthy development and interplay between the instruments. The second movement is a simple, flowing minuet while the brief finale is fast and humorous -- almost foot-stomping in character. This too is a work that bears getting to know. One contemporary admirer of this sonata, Nigel Fortune, wrote: "There is no Beethoven sonata remotely like it, and it is one of his wittiest and most delightful works." (In "A Beethoven Companion", 1971, at 217)
Szeryng and Haebler collaborate beautifully on this CD and on their earlier CD which includes the first five Beethoven sonatas for piano and violin.
This is an outstanding disc that includes the great "Kreutzer" sonata as well as Beethoven's less well-known works for the piano and violin. The opus 96 sonata in particular is outstanding. The listener will greatly enjoy exploring using this collection to explore Beethoven's ten sonatas for these instruments.
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Complete Beethoven Edition, Vol. 5: The 32 Piano Sonatas
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001GZ8 Release Date: 1997-10-14 |
Tracks:
- No.1 f-moll op. 2 No. 1: 1: Allegro
- No.1 f-moll op. 2 No. 1: 2 : Adagio
- No.1 f-moll op. 2 No. 1: 3 : Menuetto. Allegretto
- No.1 f-moll op. 2 No. 1: 4 : Prestissimo
- No.2 A-dur op. 2 No. 2: 1 : Allegro vivace
- No.2 A-dur op. 2 No. 2: 2 : Largo appassionato
- No.2 A-dur op. 2 No. 2: 3 : Scherzo. Allegretto
- No.2 A-dur op. 2 No. 2: 4 : Rondo. Grazioso
- No.4 Es-dur op.7: 1 : Allegro molto e con brio
- No.4 Es-dur op.7: 2 : Largo, con gran espressione
- No.4 Es-dur op.7: 3 : Allegro
- No.4 Es-dur op.7: 4 : Rondo. Poco allegretto e grazioso
Tracks:
- No. 3 C-dur op. 2 No. 3: I. Allegro con brio
- No. 3 C-dur op. 2 No. 3: II. Adagio
- No. 3 C-dur op. 2 No. 3: III. Scherzo, Allegro
- No. 3 C-dur op. 2 No. 3: IV. Allegro assai
- No. 5 c-moll op. 10 No. 1: I. Allegro molto e con brio
- No. 5 c-moll op. 10 No. 1: II. Adagio molto
- No. 5 c-moll op. 10 No. 1: III. Finale. Prestissimo
- No. 6 F-dur op. 10 No. 2: I. Allegro
- No. 6 F-dur op. 10 No. 2: II. Allegretto
- No. 6 F-dur op. 10 No. 2: III. Presto
- No. 7 D-dur op. 10 No. 3: I. Presto
- No. 7 D-dur op. 10 No. 3: II. Largo e mesto
- No. 7 D-dur op. 10 No. 3: III. Menuetto. Allegro
- No. 7 D-dur op. 10 No. 3: IV. Rondo. Allegro
Tracks:
- No. 8 C-moll op. 13 - Pathetique: I. Grave - Allegro di molto e con brio
- No. 8 C-moll op. 13 - Pathetique: II. Adagio cantabile
- No. 8 C-moll op. 13 - Pathetique: III. Rondo. Allegro
- No. 9 E-dur op. 14 No. 1: I. Allegro
- No. 9 E-dur op. 14 No. 1: II. Allegretto
- No. 9 E-dur op. 14 No. 1: III. Rondo. Allegro comodo
- No. 10 G-dur op. 14 No. 2: I. Allegro
- No. 10 G-dur op. 14 No. 2: II. Andante
- No. 10 G-dur op. 14 No. 2: III. Scherzo. Allegro assai
- No. 11 B-dur op. 22: I. Allegro con brio
- No. 11 B-dur op. 22: II. Adagio con molta espressione
- No. 11 B-dur op. 22: III. Menuetto
- No. 11 B-dur op. 22: IV. Rondo. Allegretto
Tracks:
- No. 12 As-dur op. 26: I. Andante con Variations - Beethoven
- No. 12 As-dur op. 26: II. Scherzo. Allegro molto - Beethoven
- No. 12 As-dur op. 26: III. Marcia funebre sulla morte d'un Eroe - Beethoven
- No. 12 As-dur op. 26: IV. Allegro - Beethoven
- No. 13 Es-dur op. 27 No. 1: I. Andante - Beethoven
- No. 13 Es-dur op. 27 No. 1: II. Allegro molto e vivace - Beethoven
- No. 13 Es-dur op. 27 No. 1: III. Adagio con expressione - Beethoven
- No. 13 Es-dur op. 27 No. 1: IV. Allegro vivace - Beethoven
- No. 14 cis-moll op. 27 No. 2 Mondschein-Sonate in C sharp minor 'Moonlight': I. Adagio sostenuto - Beethoven
- No. 14 cis-moll op. 27 No. 2 Mondschein-Sonate in C sharp minor 'Moonlight': II. Allegretto - Beethoven
- No. 14 cis-moll op. 27 No. 2 Mondschein-Sonate in C sharp minor 'Moonlight': III. Presto agitato - Beethoven
- No. 15 D-dur op. 28 Pastorale: I. Allegro - Beethoven
- No. 15 D-dur op. 28 Pastorale: II. Andante - Beethoven
- No. 15 D-dur op. 28 Pastorale: III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Beethoven
- No. 15 D-dur op. 28 Pastorale: IV. Rondo. Allegro, ma non troppo - Beethoven
Tracks:
- No. 16 G-dur op. 31 No. 1: I. Allegro vivace
- No. 16 G-dur op. 31 No. 1: II. Adagio grazioso
- No. 16 G-dur op. 31 No. 1: III. Rondo. Allegretto
- No. 17 d-moll op. 31 No. 1 - Sturm - Sonate: I. Largo - Allegro
- No. 17 d-moll op. 31 No. 1 - Sturm - Sonate: II. Adagio
- No. 17 d-moll op. 31 No. 1 - Sturm - Sonate: III. Allegretto
- No. 18 Es-dur op. 31 No. 3: I. Allegro
- No. 18 Es-dur op. 31 No. 3: II. Scherzo. Allegretto vivace
- No. 18 Es-dur op. 31 No. 3: III. Menuetto. Moderato e grazioso
- No. 18 Es-dur op. 31 No. 3: IV. Presto con fuoco
- No. 19 g-moll op. 49 No. 2: I. Andante
- No. 19 g-moll op. 49 No. 2: II. Rondo. Allegro
Tracks:
- No. 20 G-dur op. 49 No.2: I. Allegro , ma non troppo
- No. 20 G-dur op. 49 No.2: II. Tempo di Menuetto linkerkant
- No. 21 C-dur op. 53: I. Allegro con Brio
- No. 21 C-dur op. 53: II. Introduzione. Adagio molto - attacca:
- No. 21 C-dur op. 53: III. Rondo. Allegretto moderato
- No. 22 F-dur op. 54: I. In tempo d'un Menuetto
- No. 22 F-dur op. 54: II. Allegretto
- No. 23 f-moll op. 57 - Appassionata: I. Allegro assai
- No. 23 f-moll op. 57 - Appassionata: II. Andate con moto - attacca:
- No. 23 f-moll op. 57 - Appassionata: III. Allegro, ma non troppo - Presto
- No. 24 Fis-dur op. 78: I. Adagio cantabile - Allegro, ma non troppo
- No. 24 Fis-dur op. 78: I. Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- No. 25 G-dur op. 78: I. Presto alla tedesca
- No. 25 G-dur op. 78: II. Andante
- No. 25 G-dur op. 78: III. Vivace
- No. 26 Es-dur op. 81a - Les Adieux: I. Das Lebewohl (Les Adieux). Adagio - Allegro
- No. 26 Es-dur op. 81a - Les Adieux: II. Abwesenheit (L'Absence). Andante espressivo
- No. 26 Es-dur op. 81a - Les Adieux: III. Das Wiedersehn (Le Retour). Vivacissimamente
- No. 27 e-moll op.90: I. Mit Lebhaftigkeit und durchaus mit Empfindung und Ausdruck
- No. 27 e-moll op.90: II. Nicht zu geschwind und sehr singbar vorzutragen
- No. 29 B-dur op. 106 - Grosse Sonate fur das Hammerklavier: I. Allegro
- No. 29 B-dur op. 106 - Grosse Sonate fur das Hammerklavier: II. Scherzo. Assai vivace
- No. 29 B-dur op. 106 - Grosse Sonate fur das Hammerklavier: III. Adagio sostenuto. Appassionato e con molto sentimento
- No. 29 B-dur op. 106 - Grosse Sonate fur das Hammerklavier: IV. Largo - Allegro risoluto
Tracks:
- No. 28 A-dur op. 101: I. Etwas lebhaft und mit der innigsten Empfindung. Allegretto ma non troppo afdruk
- No. 28 A-dur op. 101: II.Lebhaft, marschmig. Vivace alla marcia
- No. 28 A-dur op. 101: III. Langsam und sehnsuchtsvoll. Adagio, ma non troppo, con affetto - attacca:
- No. 28 A-dur op. 101: IV. Geschwinde, doch nicht zu sehr und mit Entschlossenheit. Allegro
- No. 30 E-dur op. 109: I. Vivace, ma non troppo
- No. 30 E-dur op. 109: II. Prestissimo
- No. 30 E-dur op. 109: III. Gesangvoll, mit innigster Empfindung (Andante molto cantabile ed espressivo) gevlekt
- No. 31 As-dur op. 110: I. Moderato cantabile molto espressivo
- No. 31 As-dur op. 110: II. Allegro molto
- No. 31 As-dur op. 110: III. Adagio, ma non troppo - Fuga. Allegro ma non troppo
- No. 32 c-moll op. 111: I. Maestoso - Allegro con brio ed appassionato
- No. 32 c-moll op. 111: II. Arietta. Adagio molto semplice e cantabile
Amazon.com
Wilhelm Kempff was the premier German pianist of the postwar period, so it's no surprise that he was considered one of the supreme interpreters of Beethoven. He recorded complete sets of the sonatas and concertos twice, and just about all the rest of the chamber music with piano as well. A classicist by nature, his approach to Beethoven was clear and poised rather than impulsive, but never lacking in sheer power or virtuosity when necessary. His last cycle of Beethoven sonatas is rightly regarded as his musical testament. Even if the mono recordings offered a few more exciting moments in a couple of works, you can't go wrong here--there isn't dud in the lot. --David HurwitzCustomer Reviews:
Wilhelm Kempff Plays the Beethoven Piano Sonatas.......2005-08-16
The same holds true as a rough approach to the interpretation of Beethoven's music -- including the 32 piano sonatas. Some performers emphasize the dramatic, rugged and virtuosic characteristics of the music. Other performers emphasize the music's inward, introspective qualities. The great German pianist Wilhelm Kempff's classic recording of the complete piano sonatas is clearly within the latter approach. Kempff (1895 -- 1991) recorded the complete Beethoven sonata-cycle twice, the first in the 1950's and the second in the 1960's. The latter version was reissued on eight CDs by Deutsche Gramophonne as part of its 87-CD Complete Beethoven Edition. I had the original version on LP and purchased the CD set when LPs became obsolete. I recently had the opportunity to relisten to Kempff's performances in their entirety.
Kempff's readings of the sonatas are highly personal and introspective. His tempos tend to be slow and fluid, the pedal is used a great deal, phrasing is highly legato, and the volume is subdued and restrained. This is a metaphysical thoughtful reading of Beethoven which probes within. It is a moving and convincing way of rendering the sonatas; and I came away from my experience with a renewed devotion to this music. I have attempted about half of the sonatas myself over the years on the piano.
Beethoven's sonatas date from his youthful days in Bonn before his 1792 move to Vienna (the two sonatas of opus 49) to about 1822 (opus 111). Thus they occupied him for almost the entirety of his creative life. In listening to this complete set, the listener can follow Beethoven's development essentially chronologically and learn more first-hand about the sonatas than can be gained from reading many studies.
Separate from a chronological approach, listeners interested in a complete set of the sonatas will probably have some familiarity with some of the better-known named sonatas, such as the "Pathetique", opus 13, the "Moonlight", opus 27 no. 2, the "Waldstein" opus 53 or the "Appassionata" opus 57. After falling in love with some of these works, many listeners will want to explore the entire set of 32 sonatas.
Kempff brings his own personal, introspective readings to each of these familiar works. He does best, I think, with the rondo finale of the "Waldstein", with the "Moonlight" and with the two final movements of the "Tempest" sonata, opus 31 no. 2. His readings of these works on the whole will offer fresh insight into these great sonatas.
I think the greatest attraction of this set is the opportunity it affords to explore some of Beethoven's less frequently performed works. Again, Kempff is at his best in works of an introspective character. Thus, those coming to the sonata cycle for the first time will enjoy his performances of the opus 26 sonata, of opus 78, 79, and 81a ("Les Adieux) of opus 90, and of opus 101, 109, and 110. Opus 90, 101, and 109 are among my favorites of the cycle, and Kempff plays them soulfully and beautifully.
There is yet another group of sonatas that are still less well-known but receive excellent readings on this set. This group includes two early sonatas, opus 2 no 3 and opus 7, the opus 22 sonata, opus 27 no. 1 (the companion to the more famous "Moonlight"),opus 31 no. 3, the enigmatic opus 54, and, of course, the "Hammerklavier" sonata and the final sonata, opus 111. Each listeners choices and favorites among the 32 will vary and change with time and repeated hearings. This collection is an excellent introduction to all of them.
There are many recordings of the set of 32 sonatas and many approaches to the interpretation of Beethoven. I have lived with my set of Kempff for a long time and still am moved and inspired by his playing of this inexhaustible music. Listeners wanting to get to know this great body of work will find much to cherish in these performances by Wilhelm Kempff.
Robin Friedman
Dollar for Dollar, the Best Beethoven Sonatas on CD.......2001-03-16
What makes the Kempff set work best for me is the lack of a dogmatic, cookie cutter approach to the music. Kempff approaches each piece as a masterwork in its own right. The tempos are more sensible than those adopted by most other pianists, particularly in the slower movements. For example, in the Hammerklavier Sonata, most pianists cannot resist the urge to play the Adagio almost as a Largo--ignoring the fact that such a tempo would have made the movement incomprehensible on a piano of Beethoven's time--which had a quick tonal decay. Speaking of tone, Kempff has an especially beautiful sound--a product of his 19th century training. The phrasing is more flexible than today's "red light, green light" stop and go approach, and Kempff, unlike so many of today's pianists, never lets musical point making get in the way of the big picture, structually.
Although Kempff was getting along in years when these recordings were made--the 1960s--he is fully up to the technical hurdles these sonatas contain. The only disappointment on this set is in the "Appassionata" Sonata, where Kempff's clear headed approach does not suit this rage filled piece. For that particular piece, it's best to go with Richter's RCA recording. On the whole, this is the best set of Beethoven Sonatas currently available on CD--and it's at bargain price!
A great set, but..........2000-05-19
The Definitive Beethoven Sonatas.......2000-05-12
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- Complete Piano Sonatas 2
- Complete Piano Sonatas 3
- Early Recordings 1902-1904
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