Horowitz at the Met
Facts
| Studio | RCA |
| Release Date | May 18, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 090266331420 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 15:56 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Enhanced, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- Six Sonatas: In A-Flat, Kk. 127, L. 186: Allegro
- Six Sonatas: In F Minor, Kk. 466, L. 118: Andante moderato
- Six Sonatas: In F Minor, Kk. 184, L. 189: Allegro
- Six Sonatas: In A, Kk. 101, L. 494: Allegro
- Six Sonatas: In B Minor, Kk. 87, L. 33: Andante mosso
- Six Sonatas: In E, Kk. 135, L. 224: Allegro molto
- Ballade No. 4 In F Minor, Op.52
- Ballade No. 2 In B Minor
- Waltz In A-Flat, Op. 69, No. 1 'L'adieu'
- Prelude In G Minor, Op. 23, No. 5
Similar CDs
| Horowitz: Discovered Treasures | Horowitz: The Last Recording | Horowitz in Moscow | Horowitz Live and Unedited [includes Bonus DVD] | Horowitz at Home |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Amazing recital |
| You need it to complete your collection of Horowitz |
Horowitz is unique, too sensual perhaps, but never dry. Here Horowitz gave his best keeping the balance between mannerism and dryness. Better than most of his middle age recordings. First rate, no question about that. What is more, the audio sound here is excellent. Recommended. February 25, 2003
| a rewarding Horowitz disc |
| A Stunning Recital |
Whatever one's opinion of the sound, the recording captures Horowitz in his autumnal prime in works he was obviously comfortable with. Horowitz almost single handedly ressurected Scarlatti, and his approach to these elusive works consistenly illuminates. He almost never embellished the text, but provides more than enough variety with an endless pallette of tone colors.
Horowitz seemed more at home in Chopin's Ballade No. 4 than he did in the first Ballade. The phrasing, dynamics, and dramatic build up are just so "right" here, that one can scarcely imagine a better performance--even with the occasional minor slip of finger.
Liszt's Ballade is more bombastic than anything else. Horowitz fills the work with such epic "mad-scientist" fury, one can actually take the work seriously, at least until the track ends.
The Chopin Waltz combines both--very different--editions of Chopin's text, with perhaps a dash of Horowitz's melancholy.
The Rachmaninoff Prelude has a swinging beat that one seldom hears from this piece. The central section is as sexily voiced as a siren's song. The applause at the end is most welcome. April 1, 2000
| The master and audiophole technology |
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