Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23
Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23
ASIN: B000B8N4TU
On this CD:
1.
Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor, K. 466
Composed by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with
Renaud Stahl,
Jacques Loussier Trio,
Richard Schmoucler,
Jean Claude Auclin,
Jacques Saint-Yves,
Mathilde Sternat,
Paul Rouger,
Anne Gravoin,
Vincent Debruyne,
Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac,
Jacques Loussier,
David Braccini,
David Naulin,
Matthias Tranchant,
Sylvain Le Provost,
Andre Arpino
2.
Piano Concerto No. 23 in A major, K. 488
Composed by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
with
Renaud Stahl,
Jacques Loussier Trio,
Richard Schmoucler,
Jean Claude Auclin,
Jacques Saint-Yves,
Mathilde Sternat,
Paul Rouger,
Anne Gravoin,
Vincent Debruyne,
Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac,
Jacques Loussier,
David Braccini,
David Naulin,
Matthias Tranchant,
Sylvain Le Provost,
Andre Arpino
Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23,Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac,Sylvain Le Provost,Jean Claude Auclin,Mathilde Sternat,Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,Andre Arpino,Jacques Loussier Trio,Jacques Loussier,Renaud Stahl,Vincent Debruyne,Anne Gravoin,David Braccini,David Naulin,Jacques Saint-Yves,Matthias Tranchant,Paul Rouger,Richard Schmoucler,Telarc,Classical Artists,Concerto,France,Jazz,Piano Concerto,Pop
Average customer rating:
- cherry picking
- Brendel and Marriner play Mozart at a bargain price
- Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 1 Alfred Brendel
- Mozart's great piano concertos, Vol 1 and Vol 2
- great pianist, great price, bad track listing
|
Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 1
Manufacturer: Philips
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All Works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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Similar Items:
- Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 2
- Mozart: Violin Concertos
- Bach - The Complete Brandenburg Concertos / Pearlman, Boston Baroque
- Chopin: Favorite Piano Works
- Essential Mozart: 32 Of His Greatest Masterpieces
ASIN: B000004194
Release Date: 1994-04-12 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F, KV 459: Allegro Vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F, KV 459: Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F, KV 459: Allegro Assai
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, KV 466: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, KV 466: Romance
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, KV 466: Allegro Assai
- Rondo In D, KV 382: Allegretto Grazioso
- Rondo In D, KV 382: Adagio
- Rondo In D, KV 382: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A , KV 488: Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A, KV 488: Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A, KV 488: Allegro assai
- Piano Concerto #21 In C, KV 467: Allegro
- Piano Concerto #21 In C, KV 467: Andante
- Piano Concerto #21 In C, KV 467: Allegro Vivace Assai
- Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor, KV 491: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor, KV 491: Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 24 in C Minor, KV 491: Allegretto
- Rondo In A, KV 386
Customer Reviews:
cherry picking.......2007-02-15
Pity Alfred Brendel, Neville Marriner, and the incomparable Academy of St Martin in the Fields having to play this luscious span of concertos from the sweet spot of Mozart's oeuvre.
If there is sweeter music in the universe, it must lie at the depths of the sea or some equally inaccessible place, far from eyes and ears that could compare it to Mozart's piano concertos no. 19-24.
Mozart's piano concerti, perhaps more than those of any other composer, shape the solo instrument's phrasing so that its entrances and exits vis-à-vis the orchestral score are nearly seamless. Brendel and his supporting cast perform this aspect of the music as well as can be done.
In the stellar Philips Classics 'Duo' series, this recording may well reign supreme. It's as good as it gets.
Brendel and Marriner play Mozart at a bargain price.......2006-08-18
Philip's two double-CD sets of Alfred Brendel and Neville Marriner performing a total of ten of Mozart's great piano concertos, plus two rondos for piano and orchestra, must rate as one of the best of many bargains available in their "2 for 1" series. The four CDs add up to close to five hours of music, most of it essential listening for anyone interested in Mozart, great piano music, and great concertos.
This first of the two sets contains four indisputable masterpieces. In the stormy D minor Concerto K. 466, Brendel springs a mild surprise by playing his own cadenzas rather than Beethoven's, the ones most often used. I must confess to preferring Beethoven's unstylish but dramatic and imaginative cadenza to the first movement, but otherwise the performance is beyond reproach. Brendel adds some discreet and entirely appropriate ornamentation to the many repetitions of the second movement's main theme. The Olympian C major K. 467, with its incomparably beautiful slow movement, also receives some much-needed decoration: here the cadenzas are by Radu Lupu and are a bit quirkier than necessary. Although the soloist's tone and phrasing in the wistful K. 488 are ravishing in the first two movements, the starker phrases of the F-sharp minor Adagio are better left undecorated--for once Brendel's practically unerring sense of propriety in added ornamentation goes slightly off. In my opinion the best of a superb set of performances is that of the C minor, K. 491: Brendel and Marriner catch every nuance of tragedy while never slighting the grace of the music--the problem of writing an appropriate first-movement cadenza, difficult since Mozart left none of his own, is brilliantly solved here by the soloist.
Although in a set billed as Mozart's "Great Piano Concertos" I might have opted, narrowly, for including K. 453 in G major over K. 459, it cannot be denied that all involved seem perfectly attuned to the quicksilver energy and unexpected contrapuntal intricacies of the F major work. The two additional rondo movements, one a lightweight replacement for the original finale of Mozart's very first original piano concerto, the other a possible alternate finale to his earlier A major Concerto K. 414, are a delightful bonus. Incidentally, although the splitting of K. 488 across two generously filled CDs is an annoyance, timing restrictions would not have permitted cramming three complete concertos onto one CD as another review suggests.
Mozart: The Great Piano Concertos, Vol. 1 Alfred Brendel.......2006-07-10
Nice interpretation of Mozart's piano concerto.
Mozart's great piano concertos, Vol 1 and Vol 2.......2006-07-10
We love Mozart. Especially his piano concertos. We purchased these volumes, because we wore out our cassette tapes.
Mozart piano concertos performed by Arthur Brendel and the Academy of St. Martin in the Fields, It does not get much better than that. 5 hours of music as a very reasonable price!
I even ordered a second set to give to a friend.
great pianist, great price, bad track listing.......2006-02-16
Alfred Brendel is one of the world's most famous pianists, but not for reasons that make Argerich, Paderewski, or Rubinstein famous. Brendel is an expert both artistically and technically but he is not given to highly individualistic interpretations that rattle purists and create controversy. In other words, Brendel is a highly reliable pianist. Like Murray Perahia, there are no let downs in his recorded performances. For this and the price, no one should pass up this 2 disc recording.
The only downside is the recording's track listing. Piano Concerto No. 23 is split: its first movement is in the first disc while its last two movements are in the second. Bewildering especially since the piano concertos are not sequenced chronologically. And the insert doesn't help. It does not explain the track arrangement (is it by the year of recording? by importance in Mozart's ouvre?). Nonetheless, there it is, Piano Concerto No. 23 separated into two cds. Why this has to be is difficult to understand. The first movement, allegro, is 11.04 minutes long; in the second disc, a one movement rondo, Rondo in A, KV 386, is 8.32 minutes long. Why wasn't this rondo placed in the first disc to allow a seamless playing of Piano Concerto No. 23?
This is annoying if your player does not support multiple disc playing. I bought this 2 cd set specifically for Piano Concerto No. 23, whose second movement I love. It is one of the most sublime of piano adagios, up there with the second movements of Chopin no. 1, Rachmaninoff no. 2, Shostakovich no. 2. And I bought it specifically for Brendel's performance with the ASMITF, conducted by Neville Marriner. Brendel really makes the piano weep here. His evocations of a human's cycle of grief and redemption make the performance definitive for Piano Concerto No. 23. If the split won't bother you, do yourself a favor and get a copy.
Average customer rating:
- Sound quality poor
- Warmth and humour of Mozart
- A genius in his invaluable youth!
- Barenboim
- Great performances of inspired music
|
Mozart: The Complete Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: EMI Classics
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Similar Items:
- Mozart:The Complete Piano Sonatas and Variations
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- Beethoven: Complete Piano Sonatas / Daniel Barenboim
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ASIN: B00000C2KO
Release Date: 1998-10-20 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: II. Andante - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 1 In F Major, K 37: III. Rondo - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: I. Allegro spiritoso - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K 39: III. Molto allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: I. Allegro maestoso - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K 40: III. Presto
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: III. Molto allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: II. Andante ma un poco adagio - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K 175: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: I. Allegro aperto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: II. Andante un poco adagio - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K 238: III. Rondeau (Allegro) - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': I. Allegro aperto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K 246 'Lutzow': III. Rondeau- Tempo di menuetto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: II. Andantino - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K 271: III. Rondeau: Presto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: I. Allegro meastoso - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K 503: I. Allegretto
- Concert Rondo For Piano And Orchestra No. 1 In D Major, K 382
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: I. Allegretto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: II. Largetto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 11 in F Major, K 413: III. Tempo di Menuetto
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K 414: III. Allegretto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K 415: III. Allegro - Adagio - Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: I. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: II. Andantino
- Piano Concert No. 14 In E Flat Major, K 449: III. Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K 450: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K 451: III. Allegro di molto - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart, arr. Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: II. Andante - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: III. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': I. Allegro - Cadenza (Wanda Landowska) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K 537 'Coronation': III. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: I. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: II. Andante un poco sostenuto
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K 456: III. Allegro vivace - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: II. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 19 In F Major, K 459: III. Allegro assai - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: I. Allegro - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: II. Romanze
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K 466: III. Rondeau: Allegro assai - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: I. Allegro spiritoso - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K 491: III. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: I. Allegro maestoso - Cadenza - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 21 In C Major, K 467: III. Allegro vivace assai - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K 595: III. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Barenboim) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K 482: III. Rondo: Allegro - Cadenza (Edwin Fischer) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: I. Allegro - Cadenza (Mozart) - Tempo I
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: II. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K 488: III. Allegro assai
Customer Reviews:
Sound quality poor.......2006-04-26
The sound quality is poor and the balance no good.
Disappointing from a major company such as EMI and major performer such as Barenboim.
Their similar set of Beethoven sonatas with Barenboim (70s) is much more acceptable.
Warmth and humour of Mozart.......2006-03-23
We bought this as a gift for a friend, as we already own it, and think it is the best thing in our CD library. Barenboim brings out the humour and the warmth in the concertos without being over-romantic, and brings emotional richness to his performance - in great contrast to the rather mechanical and cold renditions by other performers who are supposed to be Mozartian 'experts'. We think Amadeus would approve whole-heartedly of these performances.
A genius in his invaluable youth!.......2005-03-30
When Daniel Barenboim decided to face the huge challenge of playing the Complete Set of Piano Concerts he was making (without knowing at this moment)one of his multiple artistic triumphs.
The first impressive detail to remark is the convincent maturity and silent self discipline self impossed by himself. But the genius of Barenboim's playing is the absolute conviction he always sounds so natural. And hardly you will find the minimum sensation of effort as you just can feel it with Brendel for instance.
I still have these recordings in vynil format and from time to time I compare both formats. Go for these records and you will not only enjoy to Mozart's genius but the grandness of a real Keyboard Giant in his twenties.
After the wise decision to perform and conduct the orchestra from the piano, the interpretations acquired a major enrichment and enlightment, and somehow these recordings constitute the previous step for that decision.
To make a major disection of Concert by Concert would be extremely interseting but it would be equally long. There are some higlights performances and in my opinion these are: The 24th, 23th, 19th,12th, 25th, 14th, 15th and the first six.
In honor to the truth there are unbeatable major versions in other performances.
The 9th I find to Geza Anda, the 18 th Andras Schiff, 20th Myra Hess with Walter in last fifties, 21 th Casadesus and Munch in the last forties not available in CD format, 22th Fisher and Serkin, 26 th Gulda Harnoncourt, 27th Haskill and Curzon.
Absolutely recommended for every real Mozart's admirer.
Barenboim.......2005-03-17
Daniel Barenboim is one of the best pianists around. He DOES NOT play Mozart too Beethoven-like. I love these recordings, and as a pianist myself, I know that Barenboim delivers very good performances of these beautiful pieces. This set is also probably just as good as the $150 Marriner/Brendel set, and at a fraction of the price. The sound quality is very good. HIGHLY recommended.
Great performances of inspired music.......2004-11-06
This set is beautifully performed and is also priced competitively. I am very satisfied with my purchase, though I'm sorry it doesn't include the concertos for 2 and 3 pianos.
Barenboim's own cadenzas are enjoyable. I don't notice any lack of maturity in the playing, but this may be my inexperience!
Some prefer Ashkenazy, but it is quite a bit more expensive [though it does include those works just mentioned].
I am confident most readers will be very happy with this set.
Highly recommended
Average customer rating:
- Excellent and inexpensive
- Satisfying, "old-school" Mozart
- Pretty Good
- EXCELLENT SELECTION AND INTERPRETATIONS
- Ashkenazy on a Classical era adventure...
|
Mozart: Great Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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Similar Items:
- Bach: Brandenburg Concertos / Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
- Beethoven: Favourite Piano Sonatas
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- Tchaikovsky: Symphony 6 "Pathétique" in B minor Op. 74
ASIN: B0000041LF
Release Date: 1997-08-26 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No.21 In C Major, K467: I. Allegro maestoso
- Piano Concerto No.21 In C Major, K467: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No.21 In C Major, K467: III. Allegro vivace assai
- Piano Concerto No.24 In C Minor, K491: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No.24 In C Minor, K491: II. Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No.24 In C Minor, K491: III. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No.25 In C Major, K503: I. Allegro maestoso
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No.25 In C Major, K503: II. Andante
- Piano Concerto No.25 In C Major, K503: III. Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No.23 In A Major, K488: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No.23 In A Major, K488: II. Adagio
- Piano Concerto No.23 In A Major, K488: III. Allegro assai
- Piano Concerto No.20 In D Minor, K466: I. Allegro
- Piano Concerto No.20 In D Minor, K466: II. Romance
- Piano Concerto No.20 In D Minor, K466: III. Rondo Allegro assai
Amazon.com
Decca has gotten around the perennial problem of filling Mozart Piano Concerto CDs by splitting No. 25 between two discs, giving us 155 minutes of Mozart for the price of a single top-line CD. The performances are top-line, too, if you like big-orchestra Mozart. Ashkenazy performs this music in a public, large-auditorium style, without the intimacy or niceties we hear from period instruments or from such pianists as Richard Goode and Mitsuko Uchida. His own cadenzas for three of the concertos are also very extroverted--and, alas, not very imaginative. Also, there are a few moments when the orchestra might have benefited from a firmer hand on the tiller than the pianist-conductor can provide. Overall, though, these are dramatic, involving Mozart performances, even if their style belongs more to the past than to the present. --Leslie Gerber
Customer Reviews:
Excellent and inexpensive.......2007-05-29
These are fabulous performances that contain all the richness, depth, and emotional movement of Mozart's best (or, one could say, most famous) piano concertos. Especially great are the performances of the 21st, 25th, and the 23rd. The 23rd on disc 2 is by far the best one I've ever heard.
This is a great buy!
Ashkenazy has a knack for putting together all that listeners want on convenient two disc sets...and they rarely disappoint. See his "Favourite Beethoven Piano Sonatas" for a similar treat.
Satisfying, "old-school" Mozart.......2005-05-07
Vladimir Ashkenazy's complete cycle of Mozart piano concertos was originally issued in the late 70s-early 80s, and holds up well, on the evidence of this bargain-priced 2-CD set of five of the most famous of these works. The pianist's approach tends toward the large-scale and deliberate. This works particularly well in the majestic C major Concerto K. 503 (one is made aware of how this work influenced Beethoven's own G major Concerto) and the tragic C minor work, K. 491. He is supported by beautiful playing from the Philharmonia Orchestra, whose strings lend a magical sheen to the Romantic melodies of the famous "Elvira Madigan" slow movement of K. 467. Ashkenasy's playing is fittingly sparkling in passagework and as transparent as a modern Steinway concert grand can be. By today's standards of historical performance the orchestra is large, some of the slow movements could have used a bit more ornamentation, and the pianist's own cadenzas to K. 467, 491 and 503 wander a bit too far afield harmonically; but these are small quibbles in otherwise enjoyable performances.
Pretty Good.......2005-04-28
I grew up listening to Rudolph Serkin play these pieces. He will always be the gold standard on Mozart piano concertos as far as I'm concerned. I gave this album 3 stars instead of 4 solely for Ashkenazy's weak play on the 3rd movement of the 20th Concerto. It didn't have the passion or fire I've come to expect from that movement. In fact, me personally, I think the whole set lacks a certain fire. I don't claim to be an expert, but his work on Mozart is nowhere near as good as his work on Beethoven. And other masters are much better at Mozart, in my opinion.
EXCELLENT SELECTION AND INTERPRETATIONS.......2004-03-04
I received this 2 cd set as a gift and have played it many times - especially the slow movements which are so ethereal and soul-wrenching - and notably Vladimir Ashkenazy's interpretations of the concertos numbers 23, 24, and 20.
The pianist is ably assisted by the incomparable Philharmonia Orchestra and the sound - for the most part - is more than adequate. Three of the concertos are DDD and two are ADD - but that does not detract in any way from the excellence of Ashkenazy's "view" on Mozart nor do the transfers diminish the artistry of Ashkenazy and the Philharmonia Orchestra.
A great buy and one that should be in all collections even if you have other interpretations; he even surpasses Alfred Brendel at times in some of the concertos - notably Nr. 23 in A major, K488
Timothy Wingate from Ottawa, Canada
Ashkenazy on a Classical era adventure..........2004-02-26
Hi to All
I am a very conservative fan of Mozart. I always buy one work from different performers to find the best for my soul...If the topic is Mozart I examine more carefully...I was very worried about Ashkenazy's Mozart interpretation before I listen to this cd...After I listened this cd I saw that there was nothing to get worried about :)
I always see and feel Ashkenazy as the king of the romantic era...He gives a great feeling to this Era's music...he touches to your soul..that was why I was worrying about his performance on Mozart...Because Classical era has a very different style of performing...and Mozart has much more difference even its in own era...on this cd we see the influence of his romantic interpretation...but it doesnt disturb you...it even adds something new to the mozart soul...maybe I felt this because of the piano's tone but sometimes you feel like it has to continue like a chopin ballade or a rachmaninov prelude...
Overall it is a touching performance of Mozart's piano concertos...especially in the second movement of 23th piano concerto in A maj...but it is not a mozartaen kind...
Romantic interpretation of this Great Music...something different and sounds nice...
M. Can EL
Average customer rating:
- Dated
- My favorite Mozart Piano concerts
- Luminous...
- Remarkable performances!
- Still among the best Mozart piano concerto cycles
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Mozart: The Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
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Similar Items:
- Mozart: 46 Symphonies - Berlin Philharmonic / Karl Böhm
- Mozart: The Piano Concertos
- Schubert: The Piano Sonatas
- Beethoven: The Complete Symphonies and Piano Concertos
- Schubert: 8 Symphonies
ASIN: B00004YZ36
Release Date: 2002-05-14 |
Tracks:
- Con No.6 in B flat, K.238: 1. Allegro Aperto
- Con No.6 in B flat, K.238: 2. (Andante Un Poco Adagio)
- Con No.6 in B flat, K.238: 3. Rondeau: Allegro
- Con No.8 in C, K.246: 1. Allegro Aperto
- Con No.8 in C, K.246: 2. Andante
- Con No.8 in C, K.246: 3. Rondeau: Tempo Di Menutto
- Con No.9 in E flat, K.271: 1. Allegro
- Con No.9 in E flat, K.271: 2. Andantino
- Con No.9 in E flat, K.271: 3. Rondeau: Presto - Menuetto: Cantabile - Tempo Primo
Tracks:
- Con No.11 in F, K.413: 1. Allegro
- Con No.11 in F, K.413: 2. Larghetto
- Con No.11 in F, K.413: 3. Tempo Di Menuetto
- Con No.12 in A, K.414: 1. Allegro
- Con No.12 in A, K.414: 2. Andante
- Con No.12 in A, K.414: 3. Allegretto
- Con No.14 in E flat, K.449: 1. Allegro Vivace
- Con No.14 in E flat, K.449: 2. Andantino
- Con No.14 in E flat, K.449: 3. Allegro, Ma Non Troppo
- Con No.2 in B flat, K.39: 1. Allegro Spiritoso
- Con No.2 in B flat, K.39: 2. Andante
- Con No.2 in B flat, K.39: 3. Molto Allegro
Tracks:
- Con No.13 in C, K.415: 1. Allegro
- Con No.13 in C, K.415: 2. Andante
- Con No.13 in C, K.415: 3. Allegro
- Con No.15 in B flat, K.450: 1. Allegro
- Con No.15 in B flat, K.450: 2. (Andante)
- Con No.15 in B flat, K.450: 3. Allegro
- Con No.17 in G, K.453: 1. Allegro
- Con No.17 in G, K.453: 2. Andante
- Con No.17 in G, K.453: 3. Allegretto
Tracks:
- Con No.16 in D, K.451: 1. Allegro
- Con No.16 in D, K.451: 2. (Andante)
- Con No.16 in D, K.451: 3. Allegro Di Molto
- Con No.18 in B flat, K.456: 1. Allegro Vivace
- Con No.18 in B flat, K.456: 2. Andante Un Poco Sostenuto
- Con No.18 in B flat, K.456: 3. Allegro Vivace
- Con No.19 in F, K.459 'Coronation': 1. Allegro Vivace
- Con No.19 in F, K.459 'Coronation': 2. Allegretto
- Con No.19 in F, K.459 'Coronation': 3. Allegro Assai
Tracks:
- Con No.20 in d, K.466: 1. Allegro
- Con No.20 in d, K.466: 2. Romance
- Con No.20 in d, K.466: 3. (Allegro Assai)
- Con No.21 in C, K.467: 1. Allegro
- Con No.21 in C, K.467: 2. Andante
- Con No.21 in C, K.467: 3. Allegro Vivace Assai
- Con No.1 in F, K.37: 1. Allegro
- Con No.1 in F, K.37: 2. Andante
- Con No.1 in F, K.37: 3. (Allegro)
Tracks:
- Con No.22 in E flat, K.482: 1. Allegro
- Con No.22 in E flat, K.482: 2. Andante
- Con No.22 in E flat, K.482: 3. Allegro
- Con No.23 in A, K.488: 1. Allegro
- Con No.23 in A, K.488: 2. Adagio
- Con No.23 in A, K.488: 3. Allegro Assai
- Con No.3 in D, K.40: 1. Allegro Maestoso
- Con No.3 in D, K.40: 2. Andante
- Con No.3 in D, K.40: 3. Presto
Tracks:
- Con No.24 in c, K.491: 1. Allegro
- Con No.24 in c, K.491: 2. Larghetto
- Con No.24 in c, K.491: 3. (Allegretto)
- Con No.25 in C, K.503: 1. Allegro Maestoso
- Con No.25 in C, K.503: 2. Andante
- Con No.25 in C, K.503: 3. (Allegretto)
- Con No.5 in D, K.175: 1. Allegro
- Con No.5 in D, K.175: 2. Andante, Ma Un Poco Adagio
- Con No.5 in D, K.175: 3. Allegro
Tracks:
- Con No.26 in D, K.537 'Coronation': 1. Allegro
- Con No.26 in D, K.537 'Coronation': 2. (Larghetto)
- Con No.26 in D, K.537 'Coronation': 3. (Allegretto)
- Con No.27 in B flat, K.595: 1. Allegro
- Con No.27 in B flat, K.595: 2. Larghetto
- Con No.27 in B flat, K.595: 3. Allegro
- Con No.4 in G, K.41: 1. Allegro
- Con No.4 in G, K.41: 2. Andante
- Con No.4 in G, K.41: 3. Molto Allegro
Customer Reviews:
Dated.......2007-05-31
In its time, this cycle of concertos was state-of-the art.
Even today, some of the performances hold up fairly well. But overall, the sound and performance are quite dated.
The orchestral playing in this set was never the greatest, too-often a bit ragged, and intonation in the strings is occasionally hit-and-miss. The winds were quite good for the time, being a bunch of big-time soloists of that era (including people like flutist Aurele Nicolet)...but even they sound a little out at times.
Anda's playing was reasonably stylish for the time. Certainly better than that of many pianists who came later. But given the evolution of Mozart-style in the last 40 years, his playing now sounds a little too plain-jane. Nothing wrong with just playing the music, but Anda is a bit too uninflected to be interesting. And, like nearly every other pianist who should know better, he plays the inferior publisher's solo part for #26...an unforgiveable act even then.
Still, all-in-all, hard to beat for the money, and an adequate introduction to some of Mozart's greatest music, but only adequate. Barely. Anda is eclipsed almost completely by Bilson and Gardiner. By Immerseel and Anima Aeterna, and would have been totally eclipsed by Levin and Hogwood, had they completed that much-lamented incomplete cycle.
Barenboim, Ashkenazy, Uchida and Perahia are all tastelessly un-stylish. To my ears, those recordings are just about unlistenable, in their day, and now. Anda beats these handily. But they are not the standard these days. They never were.
For the record, Andreas Staier and Concerto Koln are the new standard in this repertoire..it is truly tragic that Staier has not recorded any more Mozart concertos, beyond the four he did some seven years ago now.
Too bad Ivan Moravec never recorded all the Mozart concertos. That would have been something to hear. The ones he did record are right at the top of the heap, for sure.
I'd probably go with Brendel if you want a complete cycle with modern piano. Hard to beat Brendel in anything, although the ASMIF is a mediocre band at best, and you can only wish Brendel had recorded with someone else.
In short, finding top-flight Mozart piano concerto recordings, even now, with the enormous number of them out there, is still a hit/miss proposition. And finding a complete cycle on modern piano that really *gets* Mozartean style, is damned near impossible. That would be a real milestone in recording history: a cycle of Mozart piano concertos, with modern instruments, that truly delivers stylistically, and the pianist plays with the kind of freedom Mozart would have, not following the score so slavishly as nearly all recordings do, including, especially, Anda, who should have known better.
No-one's done it yet. But, maybe someone will, someday.
My favorite Mozart Piano concerts.......2007-01-11
The delivery time from Amazone was shorter than I expected.
And I have been very satisfied with the CDs.
Thanks.
Luminous... .......2006-09-27
This is an outstanding set of music, of any variety/vintage. The interpretations of all the concerti are luminous and iridescent. They bring to mind Liszt's observation about Mozart being "music's genius of light and love". I prefer them, without reservation, to the Perahia set which I also possess. All the concerti are lively and with such splendid insights, that it would appear that one is hearing several of the movements for the first time.
I heard them sequentially from #1 to #27, and cannot find words to do justice to the last concerto, which is one of my favorites. Rather than merely being slower than normal, or melancholy, it is so suspended between the earth and the sky, that one feels lifted into some alternate sphere of existence. The outcome of this magic is that when the 6/8 time of the finale is first heard, one is left gasping for air. This is the finest and most satisfying interpretation of #27 I have ever heard. My only complaint is with #24, in that it does not aspire to the symphonic reaches it attains with Wilhelm Kempff at the pianoforte, but then that I hold true for every other interpretation of that concerto as well.
All in all, a genuinely beautiful and lovely set for anyone who loves the Mozart piano concerti and hears them as frequently as do I. Recommended without reservation!
Remarkable performances!.......2006-01-02
Geza Anda possesed an unique and enviable (in the best sense of the word)rapport with Mozart. There are versions that must be underlined among the most pyramidal ever done. His First, Fifth, Sixth, Ninth, 12th,the 15th, the 19th,23th and 27th justify by far its acquisition.
Geza Anda received an invaluable influence of thwo superb musicians; the unforgettable Clara Haskil and the hyper talented Hungarian conductor, Ferenc Fricsay.
Playing and conducting from the Piano he played regularly in Salzburg Festivals, being his sound pristine and crystalline. His excellent approach and above all, his formidable pianism, conform one of the most indispensable sets of these Piano Concertos.
Specially recomended in this special year 2006 in which all of us will commemorate the 250th anniversary of this sublime composer.
Still among the best Mozart piano concerto cycles.......2004-12-06
During his lifetime Geza Anda was acknowledged as among the foremost interpreters of Mozart's piano scores, perfoming annually at the Salzburg Festival towards the end of his life. His Mozart piano concerto cycle was the first to be recorded almost in its entirety by one soloist and orchestra. It was also the first to have the orchestra under the soloist's direction. Recorded over the span of several years, these performances still sound quite vividly clear and crisp. The sound quality on these recordings is absolutely first rate. Credit is due to Deutsche Grammophon's recording engineers; these are some of the label's best recordings from the 1960's. As a soloist, Anda gives introspective, yet passionate, readings of Mozart's scores which lack the exuberance of Daniel Barenboim's performances with the English Chamber Orchestra, but are as polished as Alfred Brendel's with the Academy of Saint Martin in the Fields under Sir Neville Marriner's direction. Most noteworthy are his performances of the 14th, 17th, 20th, 21st, 24th, 26th and 27th concerti, but the others sound fine too. Fans of Mozart's piano concerti will not be disappointed with this inexpensive CD set, which still holds its own against its more recent, better recorded competition from the likes of Perahia and Uchida, to name but a few.
Average customer rating:
- Just right with a flourish
- Music 5 Stars/Ashkenazy 3 Stars
- A marriage made in heaven
- Simply the best set of Mozart Piano Concertos
- THE PINNACLE OF WESTERN MUSIC . . .
|
Mozart: The Piano Concertos
Vladimir Ashkenazy , Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Istvan Kertesz , English Chamber Orchestra , London Symphony Orchestra , Philharmonia Orchestra of London , Daniel Barenboim , and Fou Ts'ong
Manufacturer: Decca
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Similar Items:
- Chopin: The Piano Works
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ASIN: B0000041KA
Release Date: 1997-06-24 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K175: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K175: II Andante ma un poco adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 5 In D Major, K175: III Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K238: I Allegro aperto
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K238: II (Andante un poco adagio)
- Piano Concerto No. 6 In B Flat Major, K238: III Rondeau: Allegro
- Concerto For Three Painos In F Major, K242: I Allegro
- Concerto For Three Painos In F Major, K242: II Adagio
- Concerto For Three Painos In F Major, K242: III Rondeau: Tempo di menuetto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K246: I Allegro aperto
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K246: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 8 In C Major, K246: III Rondeau: Tempo di menuetto
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K271 'Jeunehomme': I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K271 'Jeunehomme': II Andantino
- Piano Concerto No. 9 In E Flat Major, K271 'Jeunehomme': III Rondeau: Presto - Menuetto - Presto
- Piano Concerto No. 1In F Major, K37: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 1In F Major, K37: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 1In F Major, K37: III (Allegro)
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 11 In F Major, K413-387a: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 11 In F Major, K413-387a: II Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 11 In F Major, K413-387a: III Tempo di menuetto
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K414-385p: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K414-385p: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 12 In A Major, K414-385p: III Allegretto
- Concerto For Two Pianos In E Flat Major, K365-316a: I Allegro
- Concerto For Two Pianos In E Flat Major, K365-316a: II Andante
- Concerto For Two Pianos In E Flat Major, K365-316a: III Rondeau: Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K415-387b: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K415-387b: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 13 In C Major, K415-387b: III Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 14 In E Flat Major, K449: I Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 14 In E Flat Major, K449: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 14 In E Flat Major, K449: III Allegro ma non troppo
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K450: I Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K450: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 15 In B Flat Major, K450: III Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K451: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K451: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 16 In D Major, K451: III Allegro di molto
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 17 In G Major, K453: III Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K39: I Allegro spiritoso
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K39: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 2 In B Flat Major, K39: III Molto allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K456: I Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K456: II Andante un poco sostenuto
- Piano Concerto No. 18 In B Flat Major, K456: III Allegro vivace
- Piano Concerto No. 19 in F Major, K459: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 19 in F Major, K459: II Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 19 in F Major, K459: III Allegro assai
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K40: I Allegro maestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K40: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 3 In D Major, K40: III Presto
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K466: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K466: II Romance
- Piano Concerto No. 20 In D Minor, K466: III Rondo: Allegro assai
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K482: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K482: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 22 In E Flat Major, K482: III Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K467: I Allegro maestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K467: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major, K467: III Allegro vivace assai
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K488: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K488: II Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 23 In A Major, K488: III Presto
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 4 In G Major, K41: III Allegro
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K491: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K491: II Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 24 In C Minor, K491: III Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K503: I Allegro maestoso
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K503: II Andante
- Piano Concerto No. 25 In C Major, K503: III Allegretto
- Rondo In D Major, K382
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K537 - 'Coronation': I Allegro
- II Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 26 In D Major, K537 - 'Coronation': III Allegretto
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K595: I Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K595: II Larghetto
- Piano Concerto No. 27 In B Flat Major, K595: III Allegro
- Rondo In A Major, K386
Customer Reviews:
Just right with a flourish.......2007-01-12
Requires the least possible effort beyond the normal exertion of attention
reserved for listening to simple background pleasantries. Lovely in other words, not pretentious at all, nothing else is required anywhere on a daily basis, still I suspect that most of you wouldn't mind a change now and again.
Music 5 Stars/Ashkenazy 3 Stars.......2006-04-25
Sorry but from listening to the 1 minute clip of the final movement pc 21, I have to go with Uchida, who in my opinion is the master of Mozart's last 8 pc;s.
I do not care for uchida's recordings of the 1-19, too thick handed for the style of those concertos.
Quick, nimble, playful was not present in Uchida of the 1-19.
Ashkenazy here is too busy with conducting to get the piano down with perfect nuances, which Mozart demands.
EDIT, I've just added to more clip r4eviews , opening move 21 and opening from the 24th pc. Reconfirms my opinuion that Uchida is much better articulated. And though Tate is aweful in the syms , in the pc's he's much more on to of things concentrating in conducting. Ashkenazy is juggling both, successful at times I'll admit. At other times sloppy. Its impossible for any performer to both conduct and play paino. Impossible as this set shows.
Nice Day
A marriage made in heaven.......2004-12-24
Rarely do soloists and orchestras create such an amazing musical experience. Even more rare is that this experience is duplicated over two dozen times. Vladimir Ashkenazy and the Philharmonia Orchestra create what is truly one of the crowning achievements of audiophile history.
I have owned this set now for nearly half a decade and I am still surprised by Ashkenazy's level of musicianship. Not that I have ever doubted his skill, rather, I am still amazed that this master of Rachmaninoff and the romantics approaches these pieces so perfectly. Ashkenazy plays these concertos as they should be played. His typical sense of drama is somewhat subdued, replaced with a sublime sense of delicacy and classical phrasing. He brings out the beautiful chromaticism, the magical melodies, and the pure beauty of Mozart effortlessly.
What is even more wonderful is that the orchestral accompaniment is top notch. Although these are not period performances, the Philharmonia plays with a classical grace and level of perfection that push these performances over the top. The orchestra's sound is full, accompanying Ashkenazy's "full" sound quite well. As mentioned above, Ashkenazy (who conducts these performances from the piano) instills in the orchestra the perfect balance of classical grace and dramatic flair.
Finally, the recorded sound is flawless. This set is so appealing to me because Ashkenazy approaches these performances in an organized, coherent fashion. Unlike his set of the Beethoven concertos (where Ashkenazy's technique, phrasing, and ultimate interpretation is dramatically different in each concerto), Ashkenazy maintains a sense of classical style throughout the cycle. And not only are the interpretations so consistent, but the sound is as well. It almost seems as if all the concertos were recorded in one session.
Moments like this are rare in music. There are certainly individual performances of the concertos that may be more appealing here or there, but all in all Ashkenazy's cycle delivers the most consistently fresh, powerful, and beautiful interpretations. For those that are not sure they want to invest so much for this set, look into Decca's CD of the "Big Six" concertos (20-25) on two CDs. But you would be missing out. Ashkenazy does not "run through" the earlier concertos but actually plays them all as if they were all equally masterful. I highly recommend this set. It is a wonderful musical investment.
Simply the best set of Mozart Piano Concertos.......2004-12-09
Ashkenazy's style is a very good fit with Mozart's piano works: light, articulate and playful. I could never part with this set. Those who only listen to the most popular concertos are missing out on some of the earlier works, which are just stunningly beautiful. The numerous scales in Mozart's scores represent a huge technical challenge, and Ashkenazy's natural fluidity makes the music very smooth and moving.
The orchestra is well balanced and remarkably well recorded. Overall, this is by far the best complete set of concertos out there. Warmly recommended.
THE PINNACLE OF WESTERN MUSIC . . ........2004-04-17
___________________________________________________________________________________________
. . . indeed, the pinnacle of musical achievement on Planet Earth - that's what I consider the piano concertos of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. And what better way to hear these concertos than in this superb cycle by Vladimir Ashkenazy. Though you may find an occasional performance that you prefer outside of this set, it is still, in my opinion, the only complete and best overall cycle of Mozart piano concertos - sure to provide you with hours of pleasure.
Ray Hoole's spotlight review above is very good and correct in calling attention to the recording concerns with Concerto No. 17 (K. 453) in this set. Still, only one flawed recording out of twenty-nine isn't bad. If No. 17 is a favorite of yours, as it certainly is of mine, may I suggest you augment this set with "MOZART: Piano Concertos (The Rubinstein Collection Vol. 61)" - RCA label, a small 2 CD album which contains concertos 17, 20, 21, 23 & 24. Not only is Arthur Rubinstein's 1961 performance of No. 17 superior to this one by Ashkenazy (in my opinion), the piano/orchestral balance is perfect in this beautifully remastered recording (and you're sure to like the other Rubinstein concerto performances as well).
Though the reviews for this set are overwhelmingly positive, you'll note an occasional preference for another artist's performances. This is only normal and amounts to purely subjective personal opinion. I've found that often times the first performance one hears of a particular classical piece (particularly if it's good) stays with that person for quite a while, sometimes indefinitely, and flavors the impression of all other performances heard thereafter. Personal preferences of tempo, artistic expression - such as cadenzas used, and orchestration will then be conciously, and subconciously, compared to that first exposure. I say this to make a point. The quality of the performances in this set by Vladimir Ashkenazy are definitely of the caliber needed to make first-time listeners feel certain they are hearing the best, while making more experienced listeners sure they are hearing first rate performances that, if not the absolute best, are certainly among the best they've ever heard. No two ways about it, MOZART: THE PIANO CONCERTOS by Vladimir Ashkenzy and the Philharmonia Orchestra is a 5 star cycle . . . Enjoy!
Average customer rating:
- Good, but...
- Good impersonation
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Jacques Loussier Trio: Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23
Manufacturer: Telarc
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
All Works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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Similar Items:
- Solo Piano: Impressions on Chopin's Nocturnes
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- Baroque Favorites
ASIN: B000B8N4TU
Release Date: 2005-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Allegro
- Romance
- Rondo Presto
- Allegro
- Adagio
- Allegro Assai
Customer Reviews:
Good, but..........2006-12-24
This jazz trio is best at interpreting impressionist classics, i.e., "Jacques Loussier Trio Plays Satie", which I highly recommend. While some of the most beautiful and creative music issues from "musical hybrid", and this trio is the best of this genre, "Mozart Piano Concertos 20/23" falls short in some places. For example, the Jacques Loussier Trio's treatment of the Romance movement of Concerto No. 20 in D Minor truly annoys due to the trap set, loud brushes et al. This passage is perhaps the most "impressionistic" part of Mozart's concerto and yet the other musicians do their best to disrupt Loussier's majestic piano work that undulates like the surf unfolding on a beach. Of course, like the pros they are, this music is redeemed in the end but I can't help feeling the trio was a little out of their element with Mozart.
Good impersonation.......2006-02-28
Some of Loussier's attemps in the near past have blatantly back-fired. Ironically, such is the case with his own compatriot composers. This attempt is a nice take on two beloved piano concertos by Mozart, which includes some swinging counterpoint with a string orchestra.
Even though time has shown that only Bach's music can successfuly withstand this kind of treatment, at least this CD is not as boring as previous installments.
During the 70's Loussier released an astute and bouncy take on Bach's Brandenburg Concerto No 5 (with orchestra also) on DECCA Phase 4. Would Polygram re-release it one day, please? It would be a great addition to those who discovered Loussier later on.
Average customer rating:
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23; 2 Rondos
Manufacturer: Deutsche Grammophon
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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- The Beatles 1
ASIN: B000ASAEI0
Release Date: 2005-11-08 |
Tracks:
- I. Allegro
- II. Romance
- III. Rondo (Allegro Assai)
- I. Allegro
- II. Adagio
- III. Allegro Assai
- Allegretto Grazioso
- Adagio
- Allegro
- Concert Rondo In A Major, K.386
Average customer rating:
- Moravec's Romantic Vision Of Mozart
- Spacious and Warm-Hearted Performances
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20 & 23
Manufacturer: Hanssler Classics
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ASIN: B000009D79
Release Date: 1998-06-23 |
Tracks:
- Piano Concerto No. 20, KV 466 D Minor: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 20, KV 466 D Minor: Romance
- Piano Concerto No. 20, KV 466 D Minor: Rondo (Allegro assai)
- Piano Concerto No. 23, KV 488 A Major: Allegro
- Piano Concerto No. 23, KV 488 A Major: Adagio
- Piano Concerto No. 23, KV 488 A Major: Allegro assai
Amazon.com
These readings appear to be the beginning of a cycle, which should come as welcome news to all Mozarteans. Born in Prague in 1930, Ivan Moravec is a pianist of uncommon gifts and one of the most sympathetic interpreters of Mozart's music ever to sit at a keyboard. His accounts of these concertos, recorded in 1995 and 1997, blend strength and gentleness, spontaneity and calculation, the playful and the serious, in a unique way--stirring in the listener that feeling of elevation that is the hallmark of the very greatest Mozart performances. Marriner and the ASMF attain the same high level of excellence, and the sound is superb. --Ted Libbey
Customer Reviews:
Moravec's Romantic Vision Of Mozart.......2002-03-15
Without a doubt, Moravec is one of our finest pianists. Having heard him play a great recital program last year at Carnegie Hall which featured music by Debussy, Mozart and Janacek, I was eagerly looking forward to hearing this CD. Moravec gives a vibrant, Romantic interpretation of Mozart's 20th piano concerto that is the most stirring I've heard; it's certainly a far cry from Brendel's austere approach. As for the 23rd Piano Concerto, Moravec's playing conveys more of a Classical interpretation than Romantic, but it is still marked by much vibrant warmth. I don't have to emphasize Sir Neville Marriner's excellence as a fine interpreter of Mozart; both he and the Academy are in splendid form as accompanists. Hopefully this is part of an ongoing Mozart piano concerto cycle which Moravec will complete. The sound quality is splendid.
Spacious and Warm-Hearted Performances.......2000-06-13
Marriner's credentials as a distinguished Mozartean are well-known and need no elaboration here. Moravec too has been playing Mozart beautifully for many years. I have a "cold war" recording of his from the mid-'60's where Mozart's gorgeous K. 475 Fantasy is coupled with Piano Concerto no. 25. His appraoch to Mozart has always been romantic, carrying a rich and full-bodied sound, and this tradition continues here. No. 20 is, along with no. 24, Mozart's most anguished concerto, and Moravec and Marriner bring out its full emotional range in a manner that leaves Perahia and Uchida in the dust. Not since Barenoim's EMI recording have I been so moved by an interpretation of this work. No. 23 is taken more lightly and briskly, as it should be, but if you want to hear how effortlessly Mozart could mask complex heartbreak with deceptively simple lyricism, listen to this concerto's slow movement. It's unforgettable. Marriner and Moravec have also collaborated on no.'s 24 and 25, and I'd recommend that as highly as I do this recording. I was lucky enough to see Moravic perform Mozart in 1991, and he's a true artist. If you're new to these concertos, then wait no longer--a whole range of undiscovered delights await you. If you have a recording of these concertos you're happy with, give this a try too. I'm sure Moravec will bring forth new insights into these pieces you thought you knew so well.
Average customer rating:
- A treasured musical file!
- Excellent playing, but piano too distant
- Great recordings
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 20, 23, 24, 26 & 27
Manufacturer: Decca
ProductGroup: Music
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All Works by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
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ASIN: B00005N56Y
Release Date: 2002-02-12 |
Customer Reviews:
A treasured musical file!.......2005-10-12
The whole story of the composers-conductors have not been written may be well considered unfinished if the name of Britten is not included. His approach in what Mozart concerns is a fact worthy of the best and sincere epithets. He added these Piano Concerts not only elegance, cram, noblesse but also aristocracy and refinement.
So when the imaginative melodic flight of Britten converges with the wisdom innocence of Sir Clifford Curzon -one of the few artists who "made sing" the piano- (Wilhelm Kempff was the genuine master in this field), the result is a true enraptured and inspired Mozart, because as the Great Genius, Mozart 's significance is major by what suggests instead by the expressed.
I should remark the special relevance of this CD because both works mean somehow, the alpha and omega of the best set of Concerts of Wolfgang Amadeus: the 20th is to my mind, the most complete and profound of all Mozart piano Concertos. It possesses humor, innocence, tragedy and redemption; all the mythic cycle expressed in thirty minutes.
"The brevity is the soul of the cleverness"
Absolutely recommended.
Excellent playing, but piano too distant.......2005-06-09
These are excellent perfomances, however, I had trouble listening to some this recording because the piano seemed so quiet and distant and was often overwhelmed by the orchestra's volume. I found myself straining to hear the quiet passages, but couldn't turn it up because the loud sections with full orchestra would be too loud. This was particularly the problem with the Britten-conducted performances, Nos. 20 and 27, less so on the rest.
I'll still try to listen to this cd, but I have other Mozart Piano Concerto performances by Alfred Brendel and Richard Goode that have better definition in the sound and a piano that doesn't get lost in the orchestra that I enjoy more.
Great recordings.......2002-05-27
Decca has wisely chosen Curzon's recordings of these Mozart concertos for reissue in their "Legends" series. Nos. 20 and 27 with Britten and the English Chamber Orchestra are absolutely classic, nos. 23 and 24 with Kertesz and the London Symphony hardly less so. Curzon was at his best in Mozart. His playing is stylish, elegant, and expressive within the context of Mozart's period, without exaggeration or idiosyncrasy. The sound is excellent and has been successfully remastered. The only snag is that no. 26 is split between the two CDs, but since this is the least popular of these concertos anyway this probably won't matter all that much. Highly recommended, and a tremendous bargain at this price (I paid almost this much a few years back just for these recordings of concertos nos. 20 and 27!).
Average customer rating:
- Great Orchestra but bad "mix" with fortepiano
- Unparalleled Performance
- Man-eating piano slain
- Excellent - but not perfect!
- The star's the limit
|
Mozart: The Piano Concertos
Manufacturer: Archiv Produktion
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ASIN: B00002DEGZ
Release Date: 2001-03-13 |
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.5 In D Major, K.175: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.5 In D Major, K.175: 2. Andante, ma un poco adagio
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.5 In D Major, K.175: 3. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.6 In B Flat Major, K.238: 1. Allegro aperto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.6 In B Flat Major, K.238: 2. (Andante un poco adagio)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.6 In B Flat Major, K.238: 3. Rondeau: Allegro
- Concerto For Three Pianos And Orchestra No.7 In F Major, K.242: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Three Pianos And Orchestra No.7 In F Major, K.242: 2. Adagio
- Concerto For Three Pianos And Orchestra No.7 In F Major, K.242: 3. Rondeau: Tempo di Menuetto
- Rondo In D Major, K.382: Rondeau: Allegretto grazioso - Adagio - Allegro
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.8 In C Major, K.246: 1. Allegro aperto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.8 In C Major, K.246: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.8 In C Major, K.246: 3. Rondeau: Tempo di Menuetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.9 In E Flat Major, K.271: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.9 In E Flat Major, K.271: 2. Andantino
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.9 In E Flat Major, K.271: 3. Rondeau: Presto - Menuetto: Cantabile - Tempo primo
- concerto For Two Pianos And Orchestra No.10 In E Flat Major, K.365: 1. Allegro
- 2. Andante
- 3. Rondeau: Allegro
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.11 In F Major, K.413: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.11 In F Major, K.413: 2. Larghetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.11 In F Major, K.413: 3. Tempo di Menuetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.12 In A Major, K.414: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.12 In A Major, K.414: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.12 In A Major, K.414: 3. Allegretto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.13 In C Major, K.415: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.13 In C Major, K.415: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.13 In C Major, K.415: 3. Allegro
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.14 In E Flat Major, K.449: 1. Allegro vivace
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.14 In E Flat Major, K.449: 2. Andantino
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.14 In E Flat Major, K.449: 3. Allegro, ma non troppo
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.15 In B Flat Major, K.450: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.15 In B Flat Major, K.450: 2. (Andante)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.15 In B Flat Major, K.450: 3. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.18 IN B Flat Major, K.456: 1. Allegro vivace
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.18 IN B Flat Major, K.456: 2. Andante un poco sostenuto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.18 IN B Flat Major, K.456: 3. Allegro vivace
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.16 In D Major, K.451: 1. Allegro assai
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.16 In D Major, K.451: 2. (Andante)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.16 In D Major, K.451: 3. Allegro di molto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.19 In F Major, K. 459: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.19 In F Major, K. 459: 2. Allegretto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.19 In F Major, K. 459: 3. Allegro assai
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.21 In C Major, K.467: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.21 In C Major, K.467: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.21 In C Major, K.467: 3. Allegro vivace assai
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.17 In G Major, K.453: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.17 In G Major, K.453: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.17 In G Major, K.453: 3. Allegretto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.20 In D Minor, K.466: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.20 In D Minor, K.466: 2. Romance
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.20 In D Minor, K.466: 3. Rondo (Allegro assai)
- Rondo In A Major, K.386: Allegretto
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.22 In E Flat Major, K.482: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.22 In E Flat Major, K.482: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.22 In E Flat Major, K.482: 3. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.23 In A Major, K.488: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.23 In A Major, K.488: 1. Adagio
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.23 In A Major, K.488: 3. Allegro assai
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.24 In C Minor, K.491: 1. (Allegro)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.24 In C Minor, K.491: 2. Larghetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.24 In C Minor, K.491: 3. (Alegretto)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.25 In C Major, K.503: 1. Allegro maestoso
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.25 In C Major, K.503: 2. Andante
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.25 In C Major, K.503: 3. (Alegretto)
Tracks:
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.26 In D Major, K.537: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.26 In D Major, K.537: 2. Larghetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.26 In D Major, K.537: 3. (Allegretto)
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.27 In B Flat Major, K.595: 1. Allegro
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.27 In B Flat Major, K.595: 2. Larghetto
- Concerto For Piano And Orchestra No.27 In B Flat Major, K.595: 3. Allegro
Customer Reviews:
Great Orchestra but bad "mix" with fortepiano.......2007-06-06
First of all the playing by all parties is impeccable. Nothing else to say about that. My only complaint, and it's a big one, is that the volume/presence of the fortepiano is WAY TOO WEAK compared to the orchestra. It is virtually impossible to listen to this in the car for when the orchestra is at a comfortable volume the fortepiano is all but muted, and if you want to hear the fortepiano then the orchestra blows the speakers out. One may argue that one should listen to these with great attention with a real stereo system, but given that that isn't always possible (I drive 2-3 hours a day, and that's when I have a chance to feed my melomania) I was EXTREMELY disappointed in the sound mix of these otherwise technically superb CDs, especially given that it wasn't cheap. :)
Unparalleled Performance.......2006-04-07
If you want to hear the sheer monumental, inexpressable genius of Mozart's music, this box set is essential. 5 stars does not even begin to describe the level of performance that Bilson, Gardiner, and the EBS set with these recordings. Truly astounding. But like one previous reviewer stated, it is pointless to write a review and even worse to rate it on a scale of one to five. You have to hear it for yourself.
Man-eating piano slain.......2006-02-24
It's not that Bilson is the world's greatest (forte-) pianist, although he's very, very good. (He's better as a performer than as a composer--he uses his own cadenzas where better ones, such as Beethoven's in #20, are commonly played.) It's not that two centuries of developing the modern piano were wasted effort, and the fortepiano sounds best after all. It's not that history trumps musicality. What makes these recordings great is that an appropriate balance between soloist and orchestra is restored.
Anyone with a sense of musical proportion, who listens carefully to recordings of piano concertos, can tell that the piano is often in the foreground when it belongs in the background, and backup from other instruments is often nearly inaudible. Of course this is especially true of the earlier concertos (Bach, Haydn, Mozart), which were scored and written based on the feeble solo instruments of the time.
Here, Archiv's restraint in miking/mixing, on top of the severe limitations of the fortepiano, greatly shifts the balance of power back towards the orchestra. This is not invariably an improvement, but most of the time it restores proper proportion to Mozart's music, with outstanding results. Often it adds drama, because instead of floating above the orchestral fray, the soloist must play very forcefully to address the competing sound of the orchestra. Perhaps the orchestra plays with a bit more conviction knowing they're not just going to be overrun by a Steinway the size of an Amtrak.
As Bilson was literally the first to admit (in the original CD notes), the fortepianos he plays cannot deliver the long legato line that pianists use to great effect in the slow movements. So there is much to be said for hearing these works on the modern piano. But Bilson and Gardiner take the bull by the horns, pick up the tempo as needed, and make the slow movements convincing on their own terms.
I got the full-priced edition years ago, and greatly enjoy going back and forth between it and modern-piano versions. Highly, though not exclusively, recommended.
Excellent - but not perfect!.......2005-10-18
These discs have to compete with giants of the pianoforte (as opposed to the fortepiano). In general they are successful - but nothing can erase some of the greatest modern performances - by Annie Fisher, Murray Parahia,Zimmerman etc.
But it is a close run thing - and to hear these works as they were originally intended is revelatory. Sir John's contribution cannot be underestimated and reveal new depths to the orchestral part.
Malcolm Bilson is first class - and reveals new delights in every concerto. But I have to wonder what other pianists might do, if they took up the challenge of the fortepiano?
So - not up to the absolute best new versions - but worth having for the balance and sound that Mozart would have heard.
In essence - a great alternative version,
The star's the limit.......2005-07-21
All the words above, below and including mine are like flys being trapped in a web. Someone asks what you think of belgian waffles and you tell them. "oh yes!" They are satisfying and fluffy. You like them with alot of maple syrup and pecans. Well that's nice. But you're dealing with creations on quite a different scale here which are really good so let's use some upgraded adjectives like "wonderful", "works of genius" and "inspiring." Well that's nice too. But, why are you sitting here watching the different colored bottles on a conveyor belt instead of leaving the factory for the feild of spring wildflowers in the open sky?
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