Beethoven: Piano Sonatas
Facts
| Studio | Philips |
| Release Date | March 29, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 028942297029 |
| Buy this item | $6.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 1 18:49 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- Grave - Allegro di molto e con brio
- Andante cantabile
- Rondo, Allegro
- Allegro assai
- Andante con moto
- Allegro ma non troppo
- Adagio sostenuto
- Allegretto
- Presto agitato
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User Reviews
Average user review:| ugh |
| Excellent collection of favorites |
| The best...simply! |
I dont really know much about classical, and I wont pretend that I do, but to me, this is perfection!
Excellent service to as item arrived in good time! June 8, 2007
| This is not Arrau, this is Beethoven himself |
That is a huge blasphemy and here's why: Beethoven was a passionate man, I guess every Beethoven fan and student knows that, and if you still don't believe it just listen to his piano, violin and cello trios to see how much passion and romance there is involved. So it doesn't matter if he dedicated these sonatar (or any of his works) to a woman, a man or an alien, it is quite clear that whoever it was intended to, Beethoven would have probably execute it with passion and romance.
The execution of the Appassionata sonata is the ultimate execution. I need more words from other universe to describe how you can easly breeze into the composer's mind and actually feel what he felt and thought when he composed this piece. The 3rd movement is to me the best around and the best I've heard (from dozens of dozens), especially the last two minutes when it's clear the composer went drive mad. With other performers you will see that in these two minutes (when the piece reachis its climax) they will normally slow down which obviously a clear mistake and not what Beethoven intended). The last two minutes are to be played with madness, more madness, anger, more anger and all the passion you can put into those 88 keys. You can't slow down the climax of the piece ! That's why it is called Appassionata ! Such a beautiful piece.
The moonlight execution is the best I've heard too (with the exception of the 1st movement). Each one of the three movements take you to a mind state where you can feel how and what Beethoven felt about countess Giuletta Giucardi: love, joy and then hate, respectively. Just like the appasionata, the 3rd movement's performance is stunning. By the time you reach half of it, your mind will think you're listening to Beethoven.
Patetique is a good execution. I haven't really heard a notable performance, probably due to the fact of being one of Beethoven's earlier -more Mozartian/classisist- works. Still it is very good, and the movement that impresses me the most is the second.
Do your self a favor and get this CD. You will trash any other Beethoven Piano sonatas CD, and you will eventually look forward to buy the 32 piano sonata box set by Claudio Arrau -to listen to the man himself playing all his works-, which I proudly own and just like this disc, it is worth every single penny. July 19, 2006
| A very passionate and serious-minded Beethoven. |
This CD is highly recommended, it's an excellent lesson in Arrau's Beethoven playing. January 1, 2004
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