Composed by Karol Szymanowski
with Kaoru Bingham
2. Mazurkas (2), for piano, Op. 62, M73
Composed by Karol Szymanowski
with Kaoru Bingham
Complete Mazurkas Op 50 & Op 62,Szymanowski,Kaoru Bingham,Meridian,Classical,Classical Music
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Karol Szymanowski: The Complete Mazurkas
Manufacturer: Hyperion UK ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009NJ1W Release Date: 2003-08-12 |
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Buy this now!.......2003-08-30
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Vladimir Horowitz, The Complete Masterworks Recordings 1962-1973, Volume VII: Early Romantics
Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000290G Release Date: 1994-07-19 |
Tracks:
- Mazurka in A minor, Op. 17 No. 4: Lento, ma non troppo
- Etude in G-flat major, Op. 10 No. 5: Vivace
- Introduction & Rondo in E-flat major, Op. 16
- Waltz in A minor, Op. 34 No. 2: Lento
- Polonaise in A-flat Major, Op. 53: Maestoso
- Mazurka in F-sharp minor, Op. 59 No. 3: Vivace
- Mazurka in C-sharp minor, Op. 50 No. 3: Moderato
- Mazurka in D-flat major, Op. 30 No. 3: Allegro non troppo
- Mazurka in E minor, Op. 41 No. 2: Andantino
- Mazurka in D major, Op. 33 No. 2: Vivace
- Etude in C-sharp minor, Op. 10 No. 4: Presto
- Etude in E major, Op. 10 No. 3: Lento, ma non troppo
- Etude in C minor, Op. 10 No. 12: Allegro con fuoco
- Prelude in B minor, Op. 28 No. 6: Lento assai
Tracks:
- Posonaise in A major, Op. 40 No. 1: Allegro con brio
- Prelude in D-flat major, Op. 28 No. 15: Sostenuto
- Etude in E-flat minor, Op. 10 No. 6: Andante
- Etude No. 2 in A-flat major from 'Trois Nouvelles Etudes': Allegretto
- Mazurka in F minor, Op. 7 No. 3
- Waltz in C-sharp minor, Op. 64 No. 2: Tempo giusto
- Variations on a Theme by Clara Wieck from Sonata No. 3 in F minor, Op. 14: Andantino
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: I. Auberst bewegt
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: II. Sehr innig
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: III. Sehr aufgeregt
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: IV. Sehr langsam
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: V. Sehr lebhaft
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: VI. Sehr langsam
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: VII. Sehr rasch
- Kreisleriana, Op. 16: VIII. Schnell und spielend
Amazon.com essential recording
Schumann and Chopin were staples of Horowitz's repertory, and this late 1960s-early 1970s collection finds him at his mature peak, playing with elan and imaginative fantasy. The Kreisleriana is one of his greatest recordings, trumping rivals with its spectacular pianism and complete identification with the composer. The Chopin set typifies Horowitz's approach--big and bold, with personalized editorial emendations and an energy that shatters the conventional salon approach. But he also sings Chopin's touching melodies as few others can, making the lovely Op. 10 No. 3 Etude an achingly touching poem. --Dan DavisCustomer Reviews:
The Schumann Kreisleriana is worth everything, and the Chopin is magical.......2005-12-20
I have often referred to recordings of music as photographs of music. And just as photographs of people a wonderfully valuable, they are not the real person and do not capture the real person. Even a movie or documentary distorts the reality of the person. Still, we treasure our home movies, photos, and recordings. And we should. We just need to remember what they really are and that they are representations of reality (or of fictions if that is what they are) rather than real life.
It was my good fortune to hear Horowitz in recital three times; twice here in Ann Arbor and once in East Lansing. While I have heard dozens of great pianists, and hundreds of very fine quality, Horowitz (and Rubenstein) had a special charisma that was totally involving. His playing had special qualities that were unique to him. He played more quietly and yet was able to send that whisper of sound to the farthest rows in Hill Auditorium. I believe the secret of his power was that he had so many shades of pianissimo. While we clearly here a great dynamic range in these recordings, the compressed nature of recordings cannot capture the full range of what we heard in live performance.
The other thing he had was the ability to not only keep the voices clear in the music he was playing, but to give each voice its own character and sound. The recording of Schumann's fabulous Opus 16, Kreisleriana included here captures this ability to a stunning degree. This recording should be in your collection and studied carefully. While these phantasies are full of contrasts that make listening to them seemingly easy, there is so much quality and interesting music that they will reward as much close listening and study as you can lavish on them.
The other Schumann work included is the "Variations on a theme by Clara Wieck" (who became Schumann's wife and was a superb and important pianist).
The Chopin pieces included here are a wonderful collection of etudes, mazurkas, the two famous polonaises, preludes, waltzes, and the wonderful but not often heard "Introduction and Rondo in E-flat major Op 16". These are all full of magic and will hold your imagination closely. I find myself saying, "Oh, I LOVE this piece" and then the next one comes on, and I say the same thing again and then again for the next one. They are all pieces I have learned to play or want to learn (like the Intro & Rondo).
Get a hold of these disks if you can. Just a number of wonderful listening experiences.
Chopin + Schumann + Horowitz = Unforgettable Playing.......2003-04-12
It was not uncommon for Horowitz to bring to light a rarely played work by a well known composer, which is the case with Chopin's Introduction & Rondo in E-flat. This early composition (probably written for Chopin's most advanced pupils) abounds with glittery passagework and technical configurations similar to his Concertos (which Horowitz never recorded). Under Horowitz's hands, the work exceeds the boundaries of mere salon piece and emerges as a virtuoso tour de force.
Horowitz (who had a Polish grandmother and was fond of pointing out that he was "half as much a Pole as Chopin") considered the Mazurkas to be Chopin's greatest works, and often stated that there was more music in the shortest Chopin Mazurka than in the longest Mahler Symphony. The pianist treated the Mazurkas less as dance pieces than as "dance-fantasies" and his playing of the works was freer than the more straightforward Rubinstein. Highlights of this set include a seductive F-sharp Minor, Op. 59 No. 3.
Horowitz made several recordings of the ever popular A-flat Polonaise, and this one adheres most closely to Chopin's text. The introduction is very sparsely pedalled (as if Horowitz were saying "Look! I can play the tricky introduction without using the pedal to cover up insufficient fingerwork. Take THAT, Rubinstein!"). The remainder of the piece goes with gusto and flair (too fast to be a Maestoso), but he somehow misses the grandeur which Rubinstein brought to the piece--and which Horowitz himself would attain in his last years. The A-major Polonaise is also taken at a fast clip, but this somehow seems more appropriate to this work, and one is reminded of Chopin's remark that if he were able to play the piece the way he meant it to be played, the piano would lay in ruins afterward.
If anyone thought Horowitz, then approaching 70, had lost any of his fire, their worries were quickly dispelled with the Etudes included here. The C-sharp Minor goes at a rapid clip, but unlike many pianists, there is no loss of clarity. The famous Revolutionary Etude is given a more outwardly virtuosic performance then the pianist's 1963 recording, yet somehow the piece has less impact here.
The ubiquitous C-sharp Minor Waltz is from the Boston concert of April 7, 1968. Three days previously, the Reverend Martin Luther King had been murdered in Memphis. At the beginning of this concert, Horowitz came onstage with an African-American minister, and played Chopin's Funeral March in memory of Dr. King.
Horowitz learned Shumann's Kreisleriana in the 1930s, but did not play it in public until 1968. Several attempts to record the work in concert were not successful, and Horowitz came to the conclusion that he needed the peace and quiet of a recording studio to achieve the concentration for a performance suitable for posterity. Horowitz recorded the work at one inspired session on December 1, 1969, and this may well be the most successful Kreisleriana ever recorded. Ironically, Horowitz, who often had trouble holding together a Beethoven Sonata, makes this structurally splintered work emerge as one piece. This is one Kriesleriana which is never rambling or boring. There is virtuosity here, but never for its own sake, and there is poetry in plenty. This stands alongside the 1932 Liszt Sonata and 1951 Rachmaninoff Third Concerto as one of Horowitz's greatest recordings. However, it should be pointed out that this reissue of Kriesleriana uses a few alternate takes, which are markedly different from the original LP and an earlier CD issue (MK42409). Although the performance is basically similar, there are several differences in detail.
Schumann's Variations on a Theme by Clara Wieck, originally included as a filler for the Kriesleriana record, is given a straightforward reading here. It a lovely little work, but it is even more beautiful in its original context: as the third movement from the composer's Sonata in F Minor, another rarely played work Horowitz would bring to light in 1975.
The sound is more than acceptable here, and especially fine in the Schumann works.
Classic Chopin.......2000-11-23
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Chopin: Complete Edition
Krystian Zimerman , Claudio Arrau , Stefan Askenase , Anatol Ugorski , Maurizio Pollini , Jean-Marc Luisada , and Zilberstein, Lilya Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00001X58Z Release Date: 1999-10-12 |
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On the 150th anniversary of his death, Deutsche Grammophon released this impressive box set featuring the complete works of Frédéric Chopin. Spread out over 17 CDs, it contains some truly big-name artists--Argerich, Pollini, Barenboim, and Ashkenazy--and a few you've probably never heard of. The majority of the set's nine volumes contain some music newly produced for this undertaking, and a few items (Chopin's songs, for instance) were recorded specifically for this collection. A well-illustrated book is included--it contains an essay, dateline, and illustrations--and each volume in the set gets its own liner notes. The music? It varies from great to less than great, but most of it is worth hearing. Those accustomed to Rubinstein's readings of the Mazurkas will find those played by Jean-Marc Luisada less fluid and lacking Rubinstein's power. Chopin's songs, seldom heard and filled with elements of Polish folk dances and the less-than-stellar lyrics of the composer's friend Stefan Witwicki, get a college try here by soprano Elzbieta Szmytka. They sound as good as you'll hear anywhere (if you can find them). It probably goes without saying that Martha Argerich's rousing 26 Préludes are some of the set's more exciting moments. But, really, the entire collection is solid. It should be noted that budget label Naxos has released its own Chopin edition at less than half the price of this set. With Idil Biret as the only performer on that set, you miss out on some of the diverse performances and personalities found here. Also, to please those of us who already own favorite performances of these works, each two-CD volume in the Complete Chopin Edition can be purchased individually. Bravo. --Jason VerlindeCustomer Reviews:
At least 16 / 19 well spent hours.......2004-10-11
Rubinstein recorded the preludes (op.28) in their entirety only once, in 1946, which means that they aren't available in RCA's collection with preferable sound quality, but on this set Martha Argerich delivers a great performance of the 26 preludes (no.1-24, op.28, plus 25, op.45, and 26, op. 35,) recorded in 1975. One prelude that in my opinion should always be played as slow and gentle as possible is no.15 (a.k.a. "The Raindrop Prelude.") What I'd like to describe as a prefect version of the piece is performed by--despite my having done a lot of research--a, to me unknown performer, but runs at 6:08 minutes. Argerich rushes the whole piece a bit (the drops fall too closely -) the fact that her version runs at 4:51 should say a lot. Of the approximately 20 different performances I've heard of this particular prelude (obviously one of my favorites,) Argerich's is the shortest, and lays somewhere in the swamp among other "medium integral" versions. She delivers exciting performances of the other preludes, though - the first time I heard them, I hit repeat on my CD player, and listened to nothing else for three days.
The Mazurkas, here performed by Jean-Marc Luisada and Lilya Zilberstein, are performed--while beautifully--quite carefully and loosely. For those who'd like a more restrained performance of the pieces, RCA's Rubinstein Collection, vol. 50, is recommended.
Besides all the music for only piano(s,) Chopin also composed 80 minutes worth of chamber music, which here is performed by Beaux Arts Trio, et al. He also wrote 45+ minutes worth of songs, which here is performed by soprano Elzbieta Szmytka and pianist Malcolm Martineau on a 1999 performance. I don't feel qualified to comment on solo singing in Polish, but while I don't care for the occasional close-to-full effect vibrato, I like Martineau's piano playing and the almost folksy melodies and arrangements. This music distinguishes itself by far from the rest of the music in the set. Translations to several languages of the lyrics to the 19 songs are included.
The stereophony on all recordings is great, the overall sound quality on all discs (when considering the years of the recordings) I'd give a 4/5, but still rate the whole package 9/10 - I'd think that some (both older and newer) recordings could have been transferred better, while some sound superior to what you'd dare dream of. This is definitely the best complete edition of Chopin's music available, and perhaps the best collection of works available on disc by any classical composer. A lot of work has been put into the set's design, the sound, and certainly the amount and accuracy of interesting info given in the enclosed illustrated 140 page hard-cover book (of which a fifth is written in English) and in the 40-60 page booklets (also illustrated) included in each volume; practically everything you'll ever need to know about the composer (and these recordings) is included here along with all the music he wrote. Well worthy of your time and money.
Enlightening but slighly blemished.......2004-07-05
The greatest virtue of this collection is the opportunity to hear more obscure elements of Chopin's collected ouevre. He wrote some lovely chamber music and wrote highly effective variations with and without orchestra. Among his 17 songs are a few gems.
As for the strength of the performances, some of them are rightly considered definitive. I love Zimerman in the piano concerti, Argerich owns the Op. 28 preludes, and I find in Pollini's scherzos the unbridled energy and interpretive depth required by these challenging pieces. Even if Daniel Barenboim's nocturnes do not set any records, they are well-done and completely satisfying.
I was less enthusiastic about Pollini's readings of the latter 2 piano sonatas, which I find prosaic on the whole. I was equally underwhelmed by Bunin's impromptus, which again betray interpretive rather than technical deficiencies. My greatest disappointment is Jean-Marc Luisada's controversial readings of the mazurkas. An unwieldy rubato rules the day here, and distorts the harmonic language to the point that it sounds like Debussy or Ravel's frequent (and unshakeably French-sounding) evocations of Spain. I much prefer any of the Rubinstein mazurka sets, which are colorful but rhythmically mindful of their namesakes.
Properly supplemented in the more familiar repertory (mazurkas, impromptus, sonatas, in particular), I believe this set is indispensable to anyone who appreciates or seeks a broader understanding of Chopin the composer. I recommend it highly.
Chopin - Luisada, Jean-Marc.......2002-04-14
It seems as often reviewers/critics/listeners have the same opinions: I wonder if it isn't in some cases the old story of the Emperors new clothes - nobody dares to have a different opinion, as they do not want to appear stupid.
Some of the reviewers here, didn't like Luisadas performances of the Mazurkas. I hold the heretical opinion that Jean-Marc Luisadas performances are much better than Rubinsteins (I possess the three different complete Mazurka recordings of Rubinstein). There are few pianists that like Luisada know how to treat the piano as a truly polyphonic instrument, with absolute control of every line, and at the same time being able to emphasise every harmonic detail - giving every chord its differing and appropriate degree of tension. Furthermore he understands how to display the different moods and characters of the music. All these factors make Luisadas performances extremely colourful. Every Mazurka with Luisada is a unique experience.
Ps. Other recordings do occasionally wet the critical appetite: For instance the everywhere highly acclaimed Chopin recordings with Pollini are often musically awful, the Etudes opus 10 nr. 1 and opus 25 nr. 1 are examples. For the complete Etudes, buy Boris Berezovsky's recording for Teldec, it surpasses Pollini by far. Ds.
Chopin - Luisada, Jean-Marc.......2002-04-14
It seems as often reviewers/critics/listeners have the same opinions: I wonder if it isn't in some cases the old story of the Emperors new clothes - nobody dares to have a different opinion, as they do not want to appear stupid.
Some of the reviewers here, didn't like Luisadas performances of the Mazurkas. I hold the heretical opinion that Jean-Marc Luisadas performances are much better than Rubinsteins (I possess the three different complete Mazurka recordings of Rubinstein). There are few pianists that like Luisada know how to treat the piano as a truly polyphonic instrument, with absolute control of every line, and at the same time being able to emphasise every harmonic detail - giving every chord its differing and appropriate degree of tension. Furthermore he understands how to display the different moods and characters of the music. All these factors make Luisadas performances extremely colourful. Every Mazurka with Luisada is a unique experience.
Ps. Other recordings do occasionally wet the critical appetite: For instance the everywhere highly acclaimed Chopin recordings with Pollini are often musically awful, the Etudes opus 10 nr. 1 and opus 25 nr. 1 are examples. For the complete Etudes, buy Boris Berezovsky's recording for Teldec, it surpasses Pollini by far. Ds.
Learn, learn, learn!.......2000-10-16
DG deserves praise for coming with an excellent set of records as well as presentation of the booklets. It is breathtaking to have the opportunity to really know Chopin so well.
Performers are first rate and speak for themselves, and for the price of 8 CD's you get the whole collection. Yes, you can get in some cases better performances, but overall you can find a better compilation. Naxos has its own, and I am going to exchange it with a friend, problem will be to get mine back!
Buy it without hesitation.
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Chopin: Complete Mazurkas
Manufacturer: Harmonia Mundi Fr. ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000APHN5 Release Date: 2003-10-14 |
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Chopin: Complete Piano Music
Idil Biret , Slovak State Philharmonic Orchestra , and Robert Stankovsky Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00001NTN0 Release Date: 1999-09-28 |
Tracks:
- Ballades - Berceuse - Fantaisie - Trois nouvelles des - Galop Marquis - Largo - Marche fune - Cantabile
- Ballade No.2 In F Major, Op.38
- Ballade No.3 In A Flat Major, Op.47
- Ballade No.4 In F Minor, Op.52
- Berceuse In D Flat Major, Op.57
- No.1 In F Minor
- No.2 In A Flat Major
- No.3 In D Flat Major
- Fantaisie In F Minor, Op.49
- Galop Marquis In A Flat Major
- Largo In E Flat Major, BI 109
- Marche Funebre
- Cantabile In B Flat Major
Tracks:
- Etudes
- No.2 In A Minor
- No.3 In E Major
- No.4 In C Sharp Minor
- No.5 In G Flat Major, 'Black Keys'
- No.6 In E Flat Minor
- No.7 In C Major
- No.8 In F Major
- No.9 In F Minor
- No.10 In A Flat Major
- No.11 In E Flat Major
- No.12 In C Minor, 'Revolutionary'
- No.1 In A Flat Major
- No.2 In F Minor
- No.3 In F Major
- No.4 In A Minor
- No.5 In E Minor
- No.6 In G Sharp Minor
- No.7 In C Sharp Minor
- No.8 In D Flat Major
- No.9 In G Flat Major
- No.10 In B Minor
- No.11 In A Minor, 'Winter Wind'
- No.12 In C Minor
Tracks:
- Mazurkas - Volume 1
- No.2 In C Sharp Minor, Op.6/2
- No.3 In E Major, Op.6/3
- No.4 In A Flat Minor, Op.6/4
- No.5 In B Flat Major, Op.7/1
- No.6 In A Minor, Op.7/2
- No.7 In F Minor, Op.7/3
- No.8 In A Flat Major, Op.7/4
- No.9 In C Major, Op.7/5
- No.10 In B Flat Major, Op.17/1
- No.11 In E Minor, Op.17/2
- No.2 In A Flat Major, Op.17/3
- No.13 In A Minor, Op.17/4
- No.14 In G Minor, Op.24/1
- No.15 In C Major, Op.24/2
- No.16 In A Flat Major, Op.24/3
- No.17 In B Flat Minor, Op.24/4
- No.18 In C Minor, Op.30/1
- No.19 In B Minor, Op.30/2
- No.20 In D Flat Major, Op.30/3
- No.21 In G Sharp Minor, Op.30/4
- No.22 In G Sharp Minor, Op.33/1
- No.23 In D Major, Op.33/2
- No.24 In C Major, Op.33/3
- No.25 In B Minor, Op.33/4
- No.26 In C Sharp Minor, Op.41/1
Tracks:
- Mazurkas - Volume 2
- No.28 In B Major, Op.41/3
- No.29 In A Flat Major, Op.41/4
- No.30 In G Major, Op.50/1
- No.31 In A Flat Major, Op.50/2
- No.32 In C Sharp Minor, Op.50/3
- No.33 In B Major, Op56/1
- No.34 In C Major, Op.56/2
- No.35 In C Minor, Op.56/3
- No.36 In A Minor, Op.59/1
- No.37 In A Flat Major, Op.59/2
- No.38 In F Sharp Minor, Op.59/3
- No.39 In B Major, Op.63/1
- No.40 In F Minor, Op.63/2
- No.41 In C Sharp Minor, Op.63/3
- No.42 In G Major, Op.67/1
- No.43 In G Minor, Op.67/2
- No.44 In C Major, Op.67/3
- No.45 In A Minor, Op.67/4
- No.46 In C Major, Op.68/1
- No.47 In A Minor, Op.68/2
- No.48 In F Major, Op.68/3
- No.49 In F Minor, Op.68/4
- No.50 In A Minor, Op. Posth.
- No.51 In A Minor, Op. Posth.
Tracks:
- Nocturnes - Volume 1
- E Flat Major, Op.9, No.2
- B Major, Op.9, No.3
- F Major, Op.15, No.1
- F Sharp Major, Op.15, No.2
- G Minor, Op.15, No.3
- C Sharp Minor, Op.27, No.1
- D Flat Major, Op.27, No.2
- B Major, Op.32, No.1
- A Flat Major, Op.32, No.2
- C Minor, B.I. 108
- C Sharp Minor, B.I. 49
Tracks:
- Nocturnes - Volume 2
- G Major, Op.37, No.2
- C Minor, Op.48, No.1
- F Sharp Minor, Op.48, No.2
- F Minor, Op.55, No.1
- E Flat Major, Op.55, No.2
- B Major, Op.62, No.1
- E Major, Op.62, No.2
- E Minor, Op.72, No.1 (Posth.)
Tracks:
- Piano Sonatas
- Menuetto
- Larghetto
- Fianle
- Grave - Doppio Movimento
- Scherzo
- Marche Funebre: Lento
- Finale: Presto
- Allegro Maestoso
- Scherzo: Molto Vivace
- Largo
- Finale: Presto, Non Tanto
Tracks:
- Polonaises - Volume 1
- E Flat Minor, Op.26, No.2
- A Major, Op.40, No.1, 'Military'
- C Minor, Op.40, No.2
- F Sharp Minor, Op.44
- A Flat Major, Op.53, 'Heroic'
- A Flat Major, Op.61, 'Polonaise-Fantaisie'
Tracks:
- Polonaises - Volume 2
- B Flat Major, Op.71, No.2
- F Minor, Op.71, No.3
- G Minor, BI 1
- B Flat Major, BI 3
- A Flat Major, BI 5
- G Sharp Minor, BI 6
- B Flat Minor, 'Adieu', BI 13
- G Flat Major, BI 36
- Andante Spianato
- Grande Polonaise
Tracks:
- Preludes (Including "The Raindrop) - Barcarolle - Bolero
- No.2
- No.3
- No.4
- No.5
- No.6
- No.7
- No.8
- No.9
- No.10
- No.11
- No.12
- No.13
- No.14
- No.15
- No.16
- No.17
- No.18
- No.19
- No.20
- No.21
- No.22
- No.23
- No.24
- Prelude In A Flat Major, Op. Posth.
- Prelude In C Sharp Minor, Op.45
- Barcarolle, Op.60
- Bolero, Op.19
- Bourree I
- Bourree II
- Wiosna
- Feuille D'Album
- Fugue
Tracks:
- Rondos and Variations
- Rondo A La Mazurka, Op.5
- Rondo, Op.16
- Rondo, Op.73
- Mazurka In G Major, BI 16
- Mazurka In B Flat Major, BI 16
- Mazurka In B Flat Major, BI 73
- Mazurka In C Major, BI 82
- Mazurka In A Flat Major, BI 7
- Mazurka In D Major, BI 4
- Variations Brillantes, Op.12
- Variations On A German Air
- Variations On A March From Bellini's I Puritani
- Variations 'Souvenir De Paganini'
- Variations In D Major For Two Pianos
Tracks:
- Scherzi and Impromptus - Allegro de concert
- No.2 In B Flat Minor, Op.31
- No.3 In C Sharp Minor, Op.39
- No.4 In E Major, Op.54
- No.1 In A Flat Major, Op.29
- No.2 In F Sharp Major, Op.36
- No.3 In G Flat Major, Op.51
- No.4 In C Sharp Minor, Op.66, 'Fantaisie-Impromptu'
- Allegro De Concert, Op.46
Tracks:
- Waltzes - Contredanse - Ecossaises - Tarantelle
- In A Flat Major, Op.34/1
- In A Minor, Op.34/2
- In F Major, Op.34/3
- Valse In A Flat Major, Op.42
- Valse In D Flat Major, Op.64/1, 'Minute'
- Valse In C Sharp Minor, Op.64/2
- Valse In A Flat Major, Op.64/3
- Valse In A Flat Major, Op.69/1, 'L'adieu'
- Valse In B Minor, Op.69/2
- Valse In G Flat Major, Op.70/1
- Valse In F Minor, Op.70/2
- Valse In D Flat Major, Op.70/3
- Valse In A Flat Major, BI 21
- Valse In E Major, BI 44
- Valse In E Minor, BI 56
- Valse In A Minor, BI 150
- Valse In E Flat Major, BI 133, 'Sostenuto'
- Valse In E Flat Major, BI 46
- Contredanse In G Flat Major, BI 17
- No.1 In D Major
- No.2 In G Major
- No.3 In D Flat Major
- Tarantelle In A Flat Major, Op.43
Tracks:
- Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 2
- Romanza: Larghetto
- Rondo: Vivace
- Maestoso
- Larghetto
- Allegretto Vivace
Tracks:
- Fantasia on Polish Airs - Krakowiak - Variations on "Li darem la mano" Andante spianato and Grande Polonaise
- Air: Juz Miesiac Zaszedi: Andantino
- Theme De Charles Kurpinski: Allegretto
- Kujawiak: Vivace
- Allegro Maestoso
- Scherzo: Molto Vivace
- Introduction: Largo
- Tema: Allegretto
- Variation I: Brillante
- Variation II: Veloce, Ma Accuratamente
- Variation III: Sempre Sostenuto
- Variation IV: Con Bravura
- Variation V: Adagio - Alla Polacca
- Introduction: Andantino Quasi Allegretto
- Rondo: Allegro Non Troppo
Amazon.com
This 15-disc set, recorded from 1990 to 1992, is a truly complete survey of Chopin's piano music, including juvenilia and the works for piano and orchestra. It may not be quite the triumph of Biret's Brahms set, in which the performances are competitive with the best to be heard anywhere. But all of this playing is thoroughly worthy of the music, and Biret's technique is strong enough to deal with such hurdles as the Études and Scherzi without flinching. Her style is a bit more straightforward than that of the most famous Chopin poets (such as Rubinstein and Cortot), making these recordings a particularly good bet for students and listeners who are first learning to love Chopin. One can often come up with a (more expensive) recording that expresses even more of the poetry of the music than Biret does: Moravec's Nocturnes, Rubinstein's Mazurkas, Zayas's Études, and so on. And occasionally some of the lesser-known music (such as the First Sonata) might be better skipped except by scholars and curious listeners who want to know why these pieces are so obscure. But finding 15 well-filled CDs of such great music, in such excellent performances, so well recorded, for such an absurdly low price becomes an irresistible bargain. Even connoisseurs who know the great Chopin recordings of the past may well find these recordings a refreshing alternate view of the music. --Leslie GerberCustomer Reviews:
The Greatest of Music--Certainly Not of Playing.......2007-05-11
Of course, playing any well written piano music is difficult--that is to do it so well that the music emerges as an autonomous being. In the case of Chopin, it is even more difficult as his music is composed with such flexibility and plasticity that the chances of going wrong are so immense. Generally, Ms Biret avoids going so much wrong that the result is less than adequate. Alas, though, there are a number of occasions where her playing is not worthy of preserving on disc--most notably the Allegro de Concert, the Barcarolle, the Nocturnes, the Mazurkas, and most of all the Etudes (this certainly not what the music says!--cf. e.g. Op 10 Nos 1, 8 & 12 or Op 25 Nos 3, 8 & 11). So, what is then the problem with Biret's Chopin playing? Well, it can rather neatly be summed up in that it is driven by her very own erratic will rather than the natural force inherent in the music. This implies highly eccentric tempos and rubatos, exaggerated sforzandos, weird pedaling, stiff keystroke, and a clumsy technique that simply is not refined enough to handle the music.
Considering the fact that the 13-disc Ashkenazy set (Decca--review pending) is available at virtually the same price (even less on amazon.com!), there is really no rational motivation whatsoever acquiring the Biret set. Ashkenazy is always good, sometimes great; Biret is mostly functional, sometimes poor. For Chopin playing of out-and-out excellence, one needs to turn to the likes of Argerich, Ohlsson, Pletnev, Perahia, Zimerman, Demidenko or Rubinstein.
Nowadays, Naxos certainly knows how to record the piano (e.g. for Glemser in Scriabin, Prokofiev and Schumann). The recordings given to Biret are, if consistent, among the ugliest ever given to the instrument. The sound is sharp, boxy and clunky, making the piano sounding more like a digital Yamaha than a Bösendorfer concert grand (indeed it is--not a Steinway).
5 stars for value, 4 for performance, 3 for packaging and mastering.......2006-08-01
The packaging is unimaginative. You get the fifteen individual CDs of the series tucked in a slip case. That's a lot of jewel box plastic and shelf space that could have been cut down to at least half. The booklets give thumbnail analyses of the works, but much of the historical background is repeated. Fifteen iterations of "Iterpreting Chopin" and Biret's biography is just a waste of paper. Naxos has made its name with quality, no-frills, budget releases. They may have done a cost analysis against repackaging but there seems little consideration toward the end user experience.
The mastering is careless. In the Variations and Sonatas, for instance, the attack for one track happens at the tail end of the previous track. This becomes evident and annoying when listening on an mp3 player. You get First movement-S[squib-pause]econd movement resumed. If the track indexing was done by an automated system they should have calibrated it a few milliseconds earlier. If it was done by a human, shame on you.
Worth the price, but you get what you pay for.......2005-07-28
Chopin only wrote one piece in his entire life that didn't include the piano, so a collection this complete of his piano music is a fascinating look into Chopin's creative life, and as a study in music history, it is worth the time. Nevertheless, people who are searching out definitive performances of more familiar works should probably search elsewhere.
Now, I am not a professional music critic, and I would never say that you should trust me over the critics. In fact, much of the acclaim this set receives is merited. Her first and fourth ballades are fine performances, and the scherzi and polonaise in A flat are well executed. That being said, I personally found several other performances to be large disappointments. (For the record, her recording was not universally praised, and some of the favourable reviews, like mine, are somewhat back-handed, but overall the set was a critical success.)
In particular, I couldn't help but think that the Berceuse, third ballade, several of the preludes, the First Concerto, and the Barcarolle were mediocre. In the Barcarolle, Biret's tempi are erratic and constantly changing, sometimes in the opposite way as Chopin indicated! (Where Chopin writes "poco piu mosso" at the transition to the B section, Biret slows to a crawl) Her dynamics are similarly strange and sometimes backward, and the climax is rushed and unmoving. For the third Opus 28 Prelude in e minor--probably one of the best-known preludes after the Raindrop in D flat--Biret takes almost a full measure's worth to play the opening figure (which is written to last one beat), and then proceeds to choose an allegretto tempo despite Chopin's directions to play slowly. She indulges here, and throughout much of the rest of the CDs, in a rubato that breaks momentum and makes it very difficult to follow the melody. It is as if a singer were to take a breath in the middle of important words--it quickly becomes hard to understand a thing she was saying.
It is true that many performers deviate from the score, sometimes in ways that enhance the musicality of the performance. Indeed, even Chopin was reported to play with dynamics that were different than the ones he himself wrote in the score, but Biret's indulgences take away from, rather than add to, the performances. I personally found many of the interpretative decisions to be distracting, or even unmusical.
I don't mean this to sound at all mean-spirited, but if I were to sum up my feelings of this set in one sentence, it would be this:
It is worth every dollar of its relatively low price.
Great!.......2005-02-13
Good Quality for the Price!.......2003-05-26
Some of the playing and interpretations are controversial, such as the lack of noticable dynamics in the nocturnes and other pieces. However, overall, the quality and the price is hard to beat.
Biret is a world-class pianist, with lots of experience. While this set doesn't bring out all of Chopin's character, it is still a new view of Chopin to many pianists out there, and for the price, it is a must-have for everyone out there/
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Chopin: Complete Mazurkas; Complete Impromptus; Berceuse
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000041AC Release Date: 1994-10-11 |
Tracks:
- Mazurkas Op. 6: No. 1 In F Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 6: No. 2 In C Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 6: No. 3 In E
- Mazurkas Op. 6: No. 4 In E Flat Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 7: No.1 In B Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 7: No. 2 In A Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 7: No. 3 In F Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 7: No. 4 In A Flat
- Mazurkas: Op. 7, No. 5 In C
- Mazurkas Op. 17: No. 1 In B Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 17: No. 2 In E Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 17: No. 3 In A Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 17: No. 4 In A Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 24: No. 1 In G Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 24: No. 2 In C
- Mazurkas Op. 24: No. 3 In A Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 24: No. 4 In B Flat Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 30: No. 1 In C Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 30: No. 2 In B Minor - F Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 30: No. 3 In D Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 30: No. 4 In C Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 33: No.1 In G Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 33: No. 2 In D
- Mazurkas Op. 33: No. 3 In C
- Mazurkas Op. 33: No. 4 In B Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 41: No. 1 In C Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 41: No. 2 In E Minor
- Mazurkas Op. 41: No. 3 In B
- Mazurkas Op. 41: No. 4 In A Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 50: No. 1 In G
- Mazurkas Op. 50: No. 2 In A Flat
- Mazurkas Op. 50: No. 3 In C Sharp Minor
Tracks:
- Mazurkas: Op. 56, No. 1 In B
- Mazurkas: Op. 56, No. 2 In C
- Mazurkas: Op. 56, No. 3 In C Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 59, No. 1 In A Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 59, No. 2 In A Flat
- Mazurkas: Op. 59, No. 3 In F Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 63, No. 1 In B
- Mazurkas: Op. 63, No. 2 In F Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 63, No. 3 In C Sharp Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 67, No. 1 In G
- Mazurkas: Op. 67, No. 2 In G Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 67, No. 3 In C
- Mazurkas: Op. 67, No. 4 In A Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 68, No. No. 1 In C
- Mazurkas: Op. 68, No. 2 In A Minor
- Mazurkas: Op. 68, No. 3 In F
- Mazurkas: Op. 68, No. 4 In F Minor
- Mazurka In A Minor
- Mazurka In A Minor
- Mazurka In B Flat
- Mazurka In G
- Impromptus: No. 1 In A Minor, Op. 29
- Impromptus: No. 2 In F Sharp, Op. 36
- Impromptus: No. 3 In G Flat, Op. 51
- Impromptus: No. 4 In C Sharp, Op. 66
- Berceuse In D Flat, Op. 57
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Chopin: Mazurkas (Complete), Vol. 2
Manufacturer: Naxos ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B0000013PQ Release Date: 1994-02-15 |
Tracks:
- No. 27 In E Minor, Op. 41, No. 2
- No. 28 In B Major, Op. 41, No. 3
- No. 29 In A Flat Major, Op. 41, No. 4
- No. 30 In G Major, Op. 50, No 1
- No. 31 In A Flat Major, Op. 50, No. 2
- No. 32 In C Sharp Minor, Op. 50, No. 3
- No. 33 In B Major, Op. 56, No. 1
- No. 34 In C Major, Op. 56, No. 2
- No. 35 In C Minor, Op. 56, No. 3
- No. 36 In A Minor, Op. 59, No. 1
- No. 37 In A Flat Major, Op. 59, No. 2
- No. 38 In F Sharp Minor, Op. 59, No. 3
- No. 39 In B Major, Op. 63, No. 1
- No. 40 In F Minor, Op. 63, No. 2
- No. 41 In C Sharp Minor, Op. 63, No. 3
- No. 42 In G Major, Op. 67, No. 1
- No. 43 In G Minor, Op. 67, No. 1
- No. 44 In C Major, Op. 67, No. 3
- No. 45 In A Minor, Op. 67, No. 4
- No. 46 In C Major , Op. 68, No. 1
- No. 47 In A Minor, Op. 68, No. 2
- No. 48 In F Major, Op. 68, No. 3
- No. 49 In F Minor, Op. 68, No. 4
- No. 50 In A Minor, Op Posth
- No. 51 In A Minor , Op. Posth
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The Complete 1950s Chopin Recordings
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00067GKFG Release Date: 2005-02-08 |
Customer Reviews:
Quieter less Histrionic Chopin Playing .......2006-08-29
Returning to listen to pianists such as Friedman in the Mazurkas (Naxos) leads me to believe technical limitations as well as personality apply in the case of Askenase and play a part in his disinclination to 'compete' with the glamor boys in this repetoire. (The nice enclosed booklet actually states that after a single hearing of Friedman play the Mazurkas Askenase shied away from them the rest of his career.) Moreover, his disinclination to record the etudes is a clear tip off that even within the music of 'his' composer he had limits. His thoughtful non-showy approach to Chopin may have been pre-determined by factors not germane to the requirements of the music itself. It's incredible to me that someone could prefer these qualities in, say, the brilliant and showy microcosmos that makes up the Waltzes to a host of other pianists who were delighted and reveled in just these qualities. Captivating and flirtatious one moment, sad and wistful the next, petutulant then suddenly exhuberant; these musical embodiments of Shakespeare's Cleopatra convey the very essence of the infinite variety of life. (With Askenase they seem more like mounted butterflies, or, fairer, industrious cabbage butterflies.) Listening to the waltzes we hear why Chopin, like Mozart, was so entranced by the songfullness of Italian bel canto. And it takes a great pianist to 'voice' the many lyric moments. Just as in song even the most thoughtful of performers must be able to rise to the technical level of a Patti or a Caruso if their way with a piece is to be considered the final word, so also in the realm of the piano, and especially Chopin!
This problem of colored memories is certainly not unique to Askenase - the French pianist Samson Francois was equally venerated in Chopin by his peers in France but today his performances reveal some troubling inconsistencies. Yet it only takes a second or so listening to Francois in Chopin's waltzes to hear how much more color and excitement exists in the music than is found by Askenase.
If you must have only one pianist for Chopin buy the Rubinstein CDs. He certainly has far greater technical skills and just as much of an understanding of the music. I think this may be one of those cases where high ratings are partly attributable to fond memories clouding reviewers' better judgement.
Ding an sich.......2006-08-17
A Poetic View of Chopin.......2005-03-22
As Amazon has not provided a list of this set's contents, here is a brief digest:
CD 1 (all 1951, all Chopin) has 14 Waltzes, Piano Sonata #2, and the Mazurka op. 50/3. CD 2 (1951-52) has Piano Sonata #3, the 2nd Piano Concerto with Fritz Lehmann and the Berlin Phil., and 4 Polkas by Smetana. CDs 3-4 (1952-54) offer 20 Nocturnes, 24 Preludes op. 28 (Chopin) and Mozart's Piano Sonata K. 570. CD 5 has 8 Chopin Polonaises from 1951-52, and from 1968 a delightful 11 minute medley (compiled by Askenase) of Schubert Waltzes & Landler, plus exceptionally lyrical accounts of Liszt's Liebestraum No. 3 and Valse Oubliee No. 1. CD 6 includes Chopin's 1st Piano Concerto & Rondo a la Krakowiak (1959, with Willem van Otterloo and the Hague Phil.), plus Mendelssohn's Scherzo in E minor and 3 of the Songs Without Words. CD 7 features Chopin's Barcarolle, Berceuse, Scherzo #2 (all 1968), the 4 Impromptus, Scherzo #3, 4 Mazurkas, and the 3rd Ballade (all from 1970-71).
It is difficult to describe what makes these recordings so very special. At an early age Askenase's only teacher was his mother, who studied with Karl Mikuli, Chopin's most famous pupil. Askenase's style of playing - intimate, tender, sensitive - tonally most reminds me of Moriz Rosenthal, another Mikuli pupil. I strongly suspect that Askenase, Rosenthal and perhaps Pachmann & Czerny-Stefanska were probably the closest to Chopin's own style of piano playing, particularly with regard to delicacy of touch and tonal color. Like Neuhaus and Horszowski, Askenase spent most of his career teaching rather than concertizing (two of his pupils were Argerich and Uchida).
If your models for piano playing are the cool efficiency of Pollini or the theatrical thunder of Horowitz, you may find Askenase's manner too polite and small-scale. But if you prefer delicate shimmer and sparkle to empty glitter, and if you are seeking lyric grace of enormous subtlety, then Askenase is a must-hear.
As a Chopin player, Askenase is at his best in the wistful elegance of the Waltzes, the improvisationally lyrical Impromptus, the dreamy Nocturnes, and the subtle rhythmic challenges of the dance-like Mazurkas and Polonaises. Next to Askenase's Waltzes, even Rubinstein sounds a shade cavalier and Lipatti a trifle objective. The Waltzes were my first exposure to Askenase in the days of LP, and they remain my favorite version of all. His Impromptus are, along with Vasary's (DG LP), the finest I have heard. For me, Askenase joins Moravec (Nonesuch) and Vasary (DG) at the top of the list in the Nocturnes. His op. 28 Chopin Preludes are among my favorites, along with Moravec, Argerich and Cortot. Askenase's Berceuse ranks with the best (e.g., Solomon and Rubinstein).
Larger-scale, more overtly dramatic works like the Scherzos and Ballades are more successfully conveyed by others, especially Rubinstein (his magnificent stereo Ballades/Scherzos CD on RCA) and Richter (his live accounts of the Scherzos on Olympia and the stunning live Ballades on his 15-disc Praga set). While a fine account, the Barcarolle here strikes me as just a notch below the versions by Rubinstein, Lipatti, and Cherkassky.
I love Askenase's way with both the concertos, though I will admit that they are scaled more to the salon than the concert stage (his #1 is similar to Czerny-Stefanska's in this respect). Otterloo (#1) and Lehmann (#2) provide the finest orchestral support these works have received on disc (conductor Otterloo's large discography is urgently in need of CD reissue). As for the folkish Krakowiak, I think Askenase's is far and away the finest recording this under-rated little gem has ever received. In the Sonatas, Askenase substitutes nuance and subtlety for drama and forward motion. These too are in my personal Chopin pantheon, along with Rubinstein and Rachmaninov (#2), and Kapell & Lipatti (#3). In the latter work, Askenase offers a deeply eloquent account of the Largo, and his last mvt. has an unusual "galop" quality that I find very attractive.
Unfortunately, like Rubinstein, Askenase never recorded the Op. 10 or Op. 25 Etudes. In those works, I love Cortot's grand style (smudges and all) and the very personal readings by Vasary (DG LP). But my "desert island" set would be the long out of print Concert Hall LPs recorded in the 1950's by the Vienna-born Robert Goldsand, who was also primarily a teacher (one of his pupils was the astute music critic Harris Goldsmith). Hopefully some enterprising CD label will re-issue Goldsand's miraculously varied and musical Chopin, which also included a GREAT reading of the rarely heard 1st Sonata and the charming Variations on Mozart's La ci darem la mano.
Space does not permit my going into any detail regarding the lovely Mozart Sonata, the idiomatic Mendelssohn (a delightful Spinning Song) or the Smetana (but listen to the latter's first Polka for Askenase's incredibly liquid passagework, the work of a truly masterful colorist).
Urgently recommended.
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Chopin: The Mazurkas (Complete)
Manufacturer: Dorian Recordings ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000A1HUN Release Date: 2003-06-24 |
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Chopin: Complete Mazurkas
Manufacturer: Classica D'oro ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000065UNO Release Date: 2002-05-07 |
Tracks:
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.1 (Op.6, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.2 (Op.6, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.3 (Op.6, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.4 (Op.6, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.5 (Op.7, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.6 (Op.7, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.7 (Op.7, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.8 (Op.7, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.9 (Op.7, No.5)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.10 (Op.17, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.11 (Op.17, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.12 (Op.17, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.13 (Op.17, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.14 (Op.24, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.15 (Op.24, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.16 (Op.24, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.17 (Op.24, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.18 (Op.30, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.19 (Op.30, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.20 (Op.30, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.21 (Op.30, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.22 (Op.33, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.23 (Op.33, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.24 (Op.33, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.25 (Op.33, No.4)
Tracks:
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.26 (Op.41, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.27 (Op.41, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.28 (Op.41, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.29 (Op.41, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.30 (Op.50, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.31 (Op.50, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.32 (Op.50, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.33 (Op.56, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.34 (Op.56, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.35 (Op.56, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.36 (Op.59, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.37 (Op.59, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.38 (Op.59, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.49 (Op.63, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.40 (Op.63, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.41 (Op.63, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.42 (Op.67, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.43 (Op.67, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.44 (Op.67, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.45 (Op.67, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.46 (Op.68, No.1)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.47 (Op.68, No.2)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.48 (Op.68, No.3)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.49 (Op.68, No.4)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No. 50 (Op. Posth.)
- Complete Mazurkas: Mazurka No.51 (Op. Posth.)
Track Listings:
- David Stoll: Chamber Music
- Dussek and The Hark
- Edward Elgar: Enigma Variations, Op. 36 / Introduction & Allegro for Strings, Op. 47 / Serenade for Strings, Op. 20 - London Philharmonic Orchestra / Vernon Handley
- Elgar: Symphony No. 1
- Evening Scene
- Everlasting Happiness
- Everlasting Peace
- Everlasting Tranquility
- Favourite Collection 2
- Felix Mendelssohn: String Symphonies Nos. 6 & 7
Track Listings
Elgar: The Two Symphonies; Falstaff [Box set]
Complete Ohio Sessions [Import]
Dream With Me Tonight, Vol. 2: A Father's Lullabies