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Everything posted by king ubu
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Really? I found them very good! But my favorites are Schnabel, the few I have by Gieseking (488, 491), Edwin Fischer, Rubinstein doing 491 with Krips (the others with Wallenstein are good but nowhere near Krips) and what I've heard so far of Casadesus was mighty fine, too (got to dig deeper there, the cheapo Sony 5 CD set is waiting to be explored), then Gould's 491, and some of Clara Haskil's, too. As for the sonatas ... Schnabel Gould Pires Gulda also some by Gieseking, Solomon, Edwin Fischer, Ciccolini ... would love to get that Gieseking EMI box, but it costs an arm and a leg these days ... got a few by Staier but haven't really warmed to them ... Bezuidenhout might suit me better, I've seen him performing two piano concertos with the Freiburger Barockorchester on TV (playing Hammerklavier) and that was mighty good, I found.
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I'm having somewhat of a hard time getting into Debussy's piano music ... the only recordings that really did it for me so far are Marcelle Meyer's (which I think haven't been mentioned her). Not sure what the problem is, but it's most likely on my end ... anyway, Meyer is wonderful, I find. Gieseking, François and Ciccolini are others I've listened to, but none of them really grabs me so far.
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Question for owners of the Nat King Cole Mosaic
king ubu replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
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Looking for recommendations: Chopin (solo piano)
king ubu replied to neveronfriday's topic in Classical Discussion
It's been a while, but I'd be all for Arrau's "Nocturnes" and "Préludes", though they are a bit earlier (1978 and 1973 respectively). Both are wonderful recordings in my opinion. Other than that, I've got plenty of older Chopin that I love just as much - but that's not the question here. -
question for our multilingual friends:
king ubu replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
But I still wonder if "how" is flat out wrong and if there's an explanation why it is wrong? -
Which Mosaic Are You Enjoying Right Now?
king ubu replied to Soulstation1's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Threadgill & Air - the first two discs with the three Air albums right now -
Some favorites, after half a year or so of intense listening to classical music (which Bach ain't, I know) - listed in no particular order: Violin Sonatas & Partitas: - Szigeti - Szeryng (1967, don't know the earlier recording yet, it's a bit too expensive) - Grumiaux - Zehetmair Cello Suites: - Casals (EMI, late 30s) - Schiefen - Gaillard (I guess Fournier will make that list, too, but not that familiar yet.) Sonatas for violin and harpsichord: - Grumiaux/Jaccottet - Laredo/Gould Sonatas for viola da gamba and harpsichord: - Rose/Gould (hellyeah!) Goldberg Variations: - Gould (both Columbias) - Tureck (EMI 1957) (now don't yell at me, the Rousset, Hantaï and Rannou are here, found the latter a bit weird, haven't played the other two yet) The Well-Tempered Clavier: - Gulda - Edwin Fischer (I've got Hanaï's first book around ... and enjoyed what I've heard from Gould, too, but not familiar enough to decide yet .. got to get more harpsichord here ... and maybe Tureck, too) Brandenburg Concertos & Orchestral Suites: - Menuhin (Bath, EMI) (clearly room for more here!) Piano Concertos: - Gould - Edwin Fischer Violin Concertos: - Menuhin - Ferras (I guess I prefer the Bath Menuhins over the Enescu ones ... and for BWV 1043 I might prefer Ferras/Schwalbé over Menuhin/Ferras, not quite sure) Cantatas: (Don't quite know yet ... but whatever I've heard sung by Janet Baker and Elly Ameling has been wonderful, partcularly "Ich habe genug" BWV 82 by Baker! Also have some fine ones - or rather just arias - by Anne Sofie von Otter ... while Kozená doesn't convince me too much.) Other than that, I've got plenty more harpsichord/piano stuff around, more recordings of the Cello Suites to explore, and the Mass in B Minor (Gardiner) as well as the St. John and St. Matthew Passions (both by Gönnenwein, the later also by Karl Richter and Paul McCreesh).
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Got the Ligeti for a bit more (18 or 19€) from amazon.it, which has it for 50€ now ... don't quite understand the rationale behind these price changes on amazon ... and of course haven't yet started digging into the box ... buying fast, but moving ahead slowly, trying to really listen before I move on.
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Which Mosaic Are You Enjoying Right Now?
king ubu replied to Soulstation1's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
disc two - "Jubilee Shout!!!" - what a hell of a fine band! -
some really good stuff there ... thanks for the reminder, will have to check for new material.
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Bottom line: the Black Keys are a lame nerdy act for white college boys with pimples who think they're cool
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question for our multilingual friends:
king ubu replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
I know about the (it) and would use "as" myself, but it's the missus correcting a grammer test, so you have to be all fair (and foul). Thanks! -
Are those the early (1956/58) or late (1972-76) ones? I couldn't say which version I prefer, but these might well be my top favoriite Liszt recordings! Also, I forgot to mention Ervin Nyiregyházi - quite a story, and some crazy playing! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ervin_Nyiregyházi http://www.nyiregyhazi.org/ http://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/16/obituaries/erwin-nyiregyhazi-dies-at-84-pianist-regained-fame-in-70-s.html
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Dang! Hadn't seen this thread when I played tons of Liszt some months ago ... but the five discs of Cziffra (now available in new packaging, indecently cheap right now amazon.de) are terrific! I first heard him in the Liszt Piano Collection box, which I got for a truly oscene price, too ... some info on it here: http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=591291) Too bad I missed the Cziffra EMI box, I'd love to have it, but having bought his Chopin 5CD set (same packaging as the Liszt set I linked) and also having sought out his "Les Années de Pèlerinages", I've got plenty of his music to enjoy. (Got the "Années" in a 4CD set which again has his "Rhapsodies hongroises", but I think in another version, don't have the discs at hand ... there are two recordings anyway, the Piano box seems to have the later, the 5CD set has the early one, the 4CD set repeats one of them but was the best way to get his "Années" recordnigs). Other Liszt favorites: Ogdon with the sonata ... and just recently discovered the terrific sonata recording by Maria Grinberg, whom I yet have to explore in any depth. Then, there's plenty of fine Liszt in the big box of Aldo Ciccolini's (including the "Années" which are in the Piano Collection box). I also get the Arrau 6CD set from Decca, which is pretty nice, too ... But the one that's most often recommended, and indeed is excellent (but does not have a complete recording of the "Années") is the Bolet ... nine discs of mostly glorious music. Plenty of attitude, but enough substance behind it to back it up!
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question for our multilingual friends:
king ubu replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Serious question, I'd appreciate help from the english-speaking crowd! -
question for our multilingual friends:
king ubu replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
digging up this topic ... not sure it fits here, but as my dear friend Niko once said: So: "Please do it exactly [as/like/how] we did it last time." Why is "how" wrong? Or is it okay, too? -
fI've recently seen "Carmen Jones" in the movies (with Marilyn Horne singing the part of Carmen for Dorothy Dandridge - and it's very well fitting I found) ... went home to listen to the Callas recording ... and enjoyed it a lot. Totally fell in love with the French soprano Andréa Guiot who sings the part of Micaëla - her second big feature (... rien ne m'épouvante, Act III) is so beautifully sung, it's hard to believe! Anyone knows more about her? I found very few on the net, hardly any track of recordings, either ... seems the did Gounod's "Mireille" and some who heard it still treasure their memories (but the only release of it I could find that would be available was a K7 in "used/good" condition, which doesn't sound too promising) ... also there's a record with parts of Offenbach's "Les Contes d'Hofmann", but that's just about it ... hard to believe such a wonderful singer left so little!
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I transcribed this section of the interview: Thanks a lot!
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I was at one of those 2011 shows and it was amazing! I'm a bit afraid to listen at home because it will never, ever reach a remotely close power ... but I will eventually listen for sure!
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There are so many good concerts from that tour... I realize that it was probably not commercially feasible to include more of them, but nobody who likes this music should go without hearing Rome (10/27), Paris (11/03 - amazing "Masqualero"), Copenhagen (11/04) and especially Rotterdam (11/09). Some of these are, in my opinion, better than what's included on this box set. Yes! I fullly agree! And that's why I was touting the idea that Vol. 3 could go on with the Oct./Nov. 1969 tour! But then I guess that might be a less good seller if they brought out another volume from the same tour.
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I still don't understand how after a "longtime faculty position at Cornish College of the Arts" he has no pension. What the hell is wrong with the USA?
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Oh, I'm not against the DVD at all - I'd just wish the November tour was covered better in terms of audio!
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The "Lost Band" one is on the shrinkwrap, while the FSK is on the digipack itself - at least that's how mine came. But this whole discussion has long gone beyond ridiculous anyway ... I'd really wish Vol. 3 would go on with more of the November 1969 tour material ... sure, we've got the DVD here and the DVD in the BB anniversary box, but I rarely watch DVDs (don't even have a functioning player right now) and would prefer to have more music! But then, future volumes dedicated to the 1971 and 1973 would obviously be most welcome, too (I don't think they'll give us 1964, as that would be pirated right away - or even has been already - but 1964 would be great, too).
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And he has retracted the news: https://twitter.com/tedgioia/
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Very sad if indeed true. Always loved his tone and phrasing, very voice-like and soft-spoken.