alocispepraluger102 Posted February 1, 2007 Report Posted February 1, 2007 anyone partial to them? can we find time for them and a space quiet enough to hear them? Quote
mikeweil Posted February 1, 2007 Report Posted February 1, 2007 (edited) You gotta spare some time and give yourself in to the music. Someone talked of "himmlische Längen" (heavenly lengths) regarding Schubert's sometimes very long movements. My favourite recording is this: Jos Van Immerseel on a Tröndlin fortepiano in excellent condition (the CD title means "Goodbye to a friend"). The label has only a few copies left, so hurry - you can only order from them directly: NorthWest Classics Recording quality is just as great. It's an enhanced CD with some info viewable on your computer. Very intimate and poetic music. Edited February 1, 2007 by mikeweil Quote
Guy Berger Posted February 1, 2007 Report Posted February 1, 2007 I don't like these as much as Beethoven's sonatas... That said, the first movement of the last Schooby sonata is really great. Guy Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted February 2, 2007 Report Posted February 2, 2007 Really "hearing" 960, courtesy of Schnabel was a major event in my life. Thanks Franz and Artur. Quote
Spontooneous Posted February 2, 2007 Report Posted February 2, 2007 Addendum to what Chuck said: After hearing nearly a dozen other performances of 960 and loving some, I finally heard Schnabel. Now no other will do. Quote
mikeweil Posted February 2, 2007 Report Posted February 2, 2007 (edited) Mike-- damn, i never even saw that! i like most Jos, tho' I've not had the $$$ to follow all his orchestral sides on Zig Zag. have you heard many of 'em? I have most of Immerseel's CDs of the last twenty years, with less than five exceptions (the Strauss, which is on my buying list, and some Mozart concertos that I have nice versions of). Those ZigZag CDs are all worth the money. As for Schubert, I stepped on this CD purely by accident - go for it, it's worth every cent. And they really have only a handful of copies left - I actually wonder it's still there, as it was close to being sold out two years ago when I found it. Staier is great, too, but he's less poetic than Immerseel. Saw Staier in concert last week - Schumann - and live he's a little more spontaneous. He strives so much for perfection that on the CDs it can get a little too perfect. Immerseel's Schubert Trios on SONY Vivarte with Bylsma and Beths are beautiful, too. Edited February 2, 2007 by mikeweil Quote
mikeweil Posted February 2, 2007 Report Posted February 2, 2007 On a modern piano (a 1923 Bösendorfer), Paul Badura-Skoda's recording on Harmonic Records (an extinct audiophile label from Paris) is my favourite - hard to find, though ....... Quote
gnhrtg Posted February 2, 2007 Report Posted February 2, 2007 I agree on Richter. I also like Lupu and, especially, Sokolov (for D960; D959 not on record yet, I think, I heard him play it in concert once and have another concert recording). Quote
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