Horowitz Encores
Facts
| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | February 22, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 078635775525 |
| Buy this item | $7.97 at Amazon.com As of Jul 6 17:33 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Horowitz Encores
Tracks
- Horowitz Variations on a theme from Carmen
- Danse macabre
- Sonata No.11, K.331: Rondo alla turca
- Wedding march and variations: Liszt - Horowitz Wedding march and variations
- Elegie Op.85 No.4: Songs without words - Elegie
- Spring Song,Op.62, No 6: Mendelssohn: Spring Song
- The Sheperd's Complaint,Op.67,No.5: Mendelssohn: The Sheperd's Complaint
- Serenade of the doll: Debussy - Serenade of the doll
- Etude In A-flat
- Etude,Op.72 No.6 in F: Etude In F
- Op.36,No.6: Etincelles
- polonaise, Op. 53 In A-flat
- C- Traumerei Op.15 No.7: Traumerei
- Scherzo a capriccio
- Rakoczy March Hungarian Rhapsody No.15: Rakoczy March
- Valse oubliee #1: Valse oubliee No. 1
- Prelude in G Minor Op.23,No.5: Prelude In G Minor
- The Stars And Stripes Forever
Similar CDs
User Reviews
Average user review:| What's not to love? |
July 27, 2007
| Irresistable |
The works on this CD can be divided into three categories: Horowitz's arrangements of orchestra pieces, double hyphenated elaborations by Horowitz of Liszt transcriptions, and "straight" piano music.
Horowitz's Variations on a Theme from Bizet's Carmen followed him throughout most of his career. None of Horowitz's seven recordings (including two piano roles, three studio recordings [1928 this one from 1947, and 1957], and two televised performances) are quite the same, as Horowitz was constantly revising and refining this piece.
As an expression of gratitude and pride at becoming an American citizen, Horowitz concocted an arrangement of Sousa's Stars and Stripes Forever--which he premiered in 1945 at I Am An American Day in New York's Central Park. By playing the piece at a true march tempo (rather than the scherzo-like tempo used in most orchestral performances) Horowitz is able to perform nearly very detail of Sousa's orchestration--including the piccolo flourishes at the climax.
Both Saint-Saëns' Danse Macabre and the Mendelsson-Liszt Wedding March are enhancements of Liszt's arrangements which would have made even that 19th Century titan gasp. Likewise Horowitz's total reworking of Liszt's Rakóczy March (which really sounds more like an arrangement of Berlioz's orchestral version), which takes demonism to new levels.
Yet there is an intimate side to Horowitz's playing which can be forgotten in the virtuosic sound & fury. The three Mendelssohn Songs Without Words are played with a lyrical simplicity. The inner voices of Schumann's Träumerai wake up and stretch while the piece dreams away. Horowitz's performance of Debussy's Serenade of the Doll makes one wish he had recorded the entire Children's Corner. He did record the complete Mozart Sonata in A, K. 331 years after the exerpt included here, and unlike the standard performance here, played the Rondo alla turca at a true march tempo.
Horowitz's performances of Moszkowski are so well known that it's difficult to think of the composer without thinking of the pianist. Yet he only recorded three pieces, all included here. Over fifty years after their issue, they remain benchmarks among piano recordings.
Not every performance on this CD shows Horowitz at his best. Chopin's A-flat Polonaise is effortlessly tossed-off, yet somehow misses the majesty Rubinstein brought to this piece. Both Mendelssohn's Scherzo a capriccio and Rachmaninoff's G minor Prelude have labored moments. Yet even off form Horowitz is better than many another pianist's best efforts.
The sound varies on this CD, and most of it is in mono. Many of these pieces had been dropped from Horowitz's repertoire by the stereo era. But as examples of masterful exploitation of the piano's resources, exciting interpretation, and brilliant--even manic--performance, this compilation transcends any sonic limitations.
February 17, 2006
| true to its title |
Dont expect anything heavy, profound, or deep-thinking. Encores were meant to be light, showy, brilliant gems of limited significance musically.
March 24, 2005
| Suffers much from poor quality |
| The Encore is more important than you might think! |
As one reviewer below said well, the encore was a special part of the recital that had its own demands and expectations. Having attended many recitals in my life I can tell you that it is a part of the recital art form that could use some revival. It isn't enough to simply flash and toss off little musical candies. That isn't what these are.
Nor do you want to lay on something with too much weight that detracts from what you did during the main recital. However, you want to send the audience away happy, impressed, and with a sense of delight with the performer and their recital experience.
Each of these pieces accomplished those goals. And Horowitz has a lot to teach all of us.
Plus these are wonderful and spectacular performances. I am so glad to have them on disk. July 8, 2002
