soulpope Posted November 24, 2024 Report Posted November 24, 2024 Terrific performances .... and the Camerata sound quality is a sure bet anyway .... Quote
Referentzhunter Posted November 24, 2024 Report Posted November 24, 2024 (edited) Antonín Dvořák Edited November 24, 2024 by Referentzhunter Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted November 24, 2024 Report Posted November 24, 2024 CD-R recreation of the original program, takn from a couple of cd reissues. Quote
Peter Friedman Posted November 24, 2024 Report Posted November 24, 2024 Beethoven - Symphony No.4 and No.7 Quote
mjzee Posted November 24, 2024 Report Posted November 24, 2024 Riccardo Muti - The Complete Warner Symphonic Recordings, disc 10. Quote
soulpope Posted November 25, 2024 Report Posted November 25, 2024 Monday morning consolation .... Quote
soulpope Posted November 25, 2024 Report Posted November 25, 2024 Life experience in music .... Quote
soulpope Posted November 25, 2024 Report Posted November 25, 2024 As we should celebrate still Bruckner`s anniversary year .... this a worthy contribution for sure .... Quote
Peter Friedman Posted November 25, 2024 Report Posted November 25, 2024 String Quartets OP.127 and Op.135 Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 Emotional still enormously precise performances .... this late(r) Borodin Quartet edition really got game .... Quote
Referentzhunter Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 (edited) Symphonies Nos. 1&3 Edited November 26, 2024 by Referentzhunter Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 Was a highligt as new release in 2017 .... and definitely still is .... Quote
Referentzhunter Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 2 hours ago, soulpope said: Was a highligt as new release in 2017 .... and definitely still is .... Beautiful, lyrical Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 14 minutes ago, Referentzhunter said: Beautiful, lyrical Indeed .... btw even more fascinating as Arcadi Volodos started his career as sort of "heavy hitter" 🧐🤔 .... Quote
Referentzhunter Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 8 minutes ago, soulpope said: Indeed .... btw even more fascinating as Arcadi Volodos started his career as sort of "heavy hitter" 🧐🤔 .... Ohh ... enchanting ! Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 10 minutes ago, HutchFan said: First listen: Interested in your impressions .... Quote
HutchFan Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 12 minutes ago, soulpope said: Interested in your impressions .... It's gorgeous music making. I'm enjoying it! Planès' playing strikes me as very buttoned-up and ultra-precise -- very "French" -- but these qualities give the music a different sort of drama than I've heard in Schubert before. It's a less Romantic sound; instead, it's an approach that seems to anticipate modernists like Debussy. I'd say that it's an interpretation that pays attention to air and the space-between-notes as much as it does to the notes themselves -- and this isn't something I'd normally associate with a composer like Schubert. Does that make sense? Quote
HutchFan Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 (edited) For comparison's sake, I'm now listening to Ashkenazy's version of Schubert's D. 894: Relative to Planès' reading, Ashkenazy's more traditional interpretation is equally beautiful -- but it's an entirely different sonic world. Edited November 26, 2024 by HutchFan Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 38 minutes ago, HutchFan said: It's gorgeous music making. I'm enjoying it! Planès' playing strikes me as very buttoned-up and ultra-precise -- very "French" -- but these qualities give the music a different sort of drama than I've heard in Schubert before. It's a less Romantic sound; instead, it's an approach that seems to anticipate modernists like Debussy. I'd say that it's an interpretation that pays attention to air and the space-between-notes as much as it does to the notes themselves -- and this isn't something I'd normally associate with a composer like Schubert. Does that make sense? Yes it does .... although Planès' approach lacks any romanticism, it gives away unadorned details of Schubert`s vulnerability and pain .... Quote
HutchFan Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 10 minutes ago, soulpope said: Yes it does .... although Planès' approach lacks any romanticism, it gives away unadorned details of Schubert`s vulnerability and pain .... Yes, exactly. I like your use of the word "unadorned." Sometimes music that holds something back has the most powerful emotional effect on the listener. Quote
soulpope Posted November 26, 2024 Report Posted November 26, 2024 The pure voice of Lorraine Hunt Lieberson shines .... Quote
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