Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with Vladimir Horowitz
2. Piano Sonata No. 10 in C major, K. 330 (K. 300h)
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with Vladimir Horowitz
3. Piano Sonata No. 13 in B flat major, K. 333 (K. 315c)c
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with Vladimir Horowitz
Mozart: Piano Sonata KV.281, 330 & 333,Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,Vladimir Horowitz,Deutsche Grammophon,Classical,Classical Composers,Classical Music,Classical Sonata/Sonatina for Keyboard,Keyboard
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Mozart: Piano Sonatas KV. 281/KV. 330/KV. 333/Rondo, KV. 485/Adagio, KV. 540
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001GNI Release Date: 1995-03-14 |
Tracks:
- Piano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.281 (189f): 1. Allegro
- Oiano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.281 (189f): 2. Andante Amoroso
- Piano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.281 (189f): 3. Rondeau: Allegro
- Piano Sonata In C Major, K.330 (300h): 1. Allegro Moderato
- Piano Sonata In C Major, K.330 (300h): 2. Andante Cantabile
- Piano Sonata In C Major, K.330 (300h): 3. Allegretto
- Piano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.333 (315c): 1. Allegro
- Piano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.333 (315c): 2. Andante Cantabile
- Piano Sonata In B Flat Major, K.333 (315c): 3. Allegretto Grazioso
- Adagio In B Minor, K.540
- Rondo In D Major, K.485
Customer Reviews:
A PIONEER.......2004-05-16
The five performances here apparently come from the last years of the great man's career. I have a number of other discs from him at this period, and this is the one that I like, slightly to my own surprise, easily the best. What endears this record to me is the sense of spontaneity and enthusiasm that I sense in the playing. Horowitz obviously loves this music. In his final years his touch lost some of its evenness, but that is no real problem this time. Stylistically, I feel that Horowitz was more certain of himself in Mozart than he was in Beethoven. There is not a single tempo in all the 11 tracks that I have any difficulty with. In terms of dynamics he does not see anything wrong with a biggish tone now and again, and I must say neither do I. In general the effect is proportionate without being prettified. There are some very interesting clips from him in the liner, and I took away two points in particular from him. First, it's hard to argue with his view that one can reproduce the effect of a fortepiano on a concert grand but not the other way about. Absolutely, and that is how he goes about things here, giving us restrained dynamics with the occasional glimpse of what the extra potential of a great 8-foot beast can add now and again. It reminded me of his memorable Scarlatti, using the concert grand to replicate a harpsichord in a way that Lipatti and Michelangeli and even Gould did not choose to do. His other specially intriguing remark relates to tempo rubato - he draws a pointed parallel between Chopin's famous rule that the left hand should keep strict time but the right had much more freedom and what appears to have been an astonishingly similar statement by Mozart himself. If the quotation had not been given, I think I would still have found his very disciplined rubato here both perfectly in keeping with Mozart's idiom and at the same time expressive. I found that the `andante amoroso' of the sonata K281 and the great B minor adagio K540 had a lot to say to me here.
I sense that I may be lowering the 5-star bar just a little, but this is a player I love and this is a record I feel privileged to have found. There was nobody quite like Horowitz, and there is still some of the special and unique magic here.
A sublime performance........2003-08-20
The reviewer from Hong Kong who gave this performance only 3 stars should be pityed.
I have the same pieces performed by Uchida, Gould, Barenboim and Perahia. While Gould's Mozart is certainly special, Barenboim's interesting, they all pale in comparison to Horowitz.
I'm sorry to say but this is a one of a kind CD in the Mozart discography.
Not essentially a Mozartian, Not Really.......2003-03-03
Horowitz is as usual very tight and elastic-- though not to the extent of his earlier years. And although he is much more relaxed and sublime by this time, I'm still not sure if organic is the word. But whether the outcome is Mozart the "vulgar man", or the noble music Mozart "promised" us, is a different matter: it's probably somewhere in between, and it's definitely seusuos enough. Horowitz's compact sense of structure, the changing of tone colours supported by his bell like sound is amazing, if not stunning. If one is minded to have an alternative, by all means get this one, particularly if one couldn't get his "Vienna Recital". However, my favourite Mozart players are:
HORSZOWSKI: he recorded a complete round of Mozart's sonatas (alongside with his round of Beethoven sonatas ) and unlike Horowitz, almost every sonata has a different character-- he was the pupil of Leschetizky; the chosen accompanist of Casals, generally known as the greatest cellist of the century, and, piano teacher of Parahia. He passed away in the 90s when he was almost 100 years old, leaving with us at least 1/2 a dozen records with top quality sound including a few Mozart sonatas;
EDWIN FISCHER: his playing is divine. The more you listen to him, the more you'll discover. He happened to be the teacher of Alfred Brendel and Barenboim;
CLARA HASKIL: fellow student of Rudolf Serkin and Szell, sheer spontaneity coupled with absolute command of the keyboard plus an immense musicianship;
GEZA ANDA: most well-rounded. He later turned into a conductor, and the music and recorded sound of his records are of topmost quality; otherwise SZELL the conductor himself.
For the younger generation ( but they are not with us anymore now), FIRKUSNY or even ANNIE FISCHER. For the older generation DOHNANYI the conductor/composer: he is supreme, and he happened to be the teacher of Geza Anda amongst others.
For an alternative, one could turn to GULDA particularly his later years. He was the piano teacher of Martha Argerich and Abbado, the conductor of Berlin Philharmonic.
There are quite a few who are also interesting... Those who haven't heard them could perhaps check them out and judge for themselves.
One of a Kind.......2001-04-27
Master at work.......2000-06-19
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Mozart: Piano Sonata KV.281, 330 & 333
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000001GE7 Release Date: 1991-04-05 |
Tracks:
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 281: Allegro
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 281: Andante amoroso
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 281: Rondeau. Allegro
- Klaviersonate C-dur KV 330: Allegro moderato
- Klaviersonate C-dur KV 330: Andante cantabile
- Klaviersonate C-dur KV 330: Allegretto
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 333: Allegro
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 333: Andante cantabile
- Klaviersonate B-dur KV 333: Allegretto grazioso
Customer Reviews:
Golden moments to treasure..........2000-07-20
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Mozart: The Piano Sonatas
Manufacturer: Elektra / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000000SE8 Release Date: 1992-05-07 |
Track Listings:
- MOZART : Piano Sonatas - Klien
- Mozart: Serenade No12; Serenade No11
- Mozart: String Quartets K.387 & K.421
- Neeme Järvi-The Early Recordings, Vol. 1
- Neeme Järvi-The Early Recordings, Vol. 4
- NIELSEN : Concertos for Violin, Clarinet & Flute - Matsuyama / McCaw / Stinton
- Organ Music in France and Southern Netherlands
- Organ Symphony, Piano Concerto No. 4, Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso
- Organo Deco: David Britton
- Piano Quartet / Piano Trio 1 Op 49
Track Listings
Nothing Noteworthy Happened Today
Robert Helps, John Adams, Todd Brief, Roger Sessions
The Best of Promise Keepers, Vol. 2
Old School Original Salsa Classics, Vol. 4
Sound of the Underground [CD-single] [Enhanced] [Import]
The Best in 12 Years of Bonzai [Import]
Bach: St. John Passion; Mass in B Minor; Easter Oratorio; Ascension Oratorio