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Beethoven: The Complete Sonatas [Box Set] | Ludwig van Beethoven, Richard Goode | Richard Goode Plays Beethoven Sonatas
 
 


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Beethoven: The Complete Sonatas [Box Set]
Ludwig van Beethoven, Richard Goode

Nonesuch, 1993

average customer review:based on 37 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended




Easily the reference set of Beethoven sonatas

There is no way that I could tell you about each of the performances in this set individually, but I can tell there wasn't one that I did not enjoy. For a long time now, Brendel's set has been the has been the one against which all others are compared, Goode has put an end to that. Richard Goode has officially produced the best all around set of Beethoven sonatas ever. The reason is simple. He doesn't go into the sonatas with a concept of how he's going to play them. He treats them all as they should be, different. He plays everything that Beethoven wrote, and then adds to it which is something that is becoming less popular in piano performance. He plays all of the composer's ornaments, articulations, and dynamic changes exactly as they are written, and then adds his personal touch. The result is a consistently beautifully played Beethoven set where the performer is playing masterfully but never getting in the way of the music. In this set we get the most intense Beethoven (He plays the Hammerklavier like no other) as well as the most meditatively serene. Shop around for different ones, but eventually I guarantee you will come back to Goode. Highest Recommendation


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Richard Goode Plays Beethoven Sonatas

Richard Goode Plays Beethoven's Thirty-two Sonatas for Piano

I was looking through my mementos for the concert programs they used to have in St Paul's and Trinity Church down on Wall Street during lunch hours. For two days a week back in the 1970's, `80's and 90's when I was on Wall Street these sister Episcopalian churches would have noonday concerts. In fact, that's what they were called, Noonday Concerts. I remember that I had not previously heard Richard Goode play, but I had heard of him, and when Trinity Church announced that he was to play some Beethoven sonatas at the Noonday Concerts I thought I'd go hear him. Back in those days these concerts were free, and they frequently had distinguished, well-known artists . I was with my first wife when I first went to hear him. I mention this because it wasn't until years later, when I was with my present wife, that I discovered that my teacher, John Kamitsuka, was a student of Goode's.

The first time I saw RG, he came out of the left side of the Trinity Church altar at a fairly brisk pace, with a shy but friendly smile on his face, went to the piano, took a short bow, looked once around the audience, and promptly seated himself at the piano. He took some time to adjust the bench and then rubbed his hands together, looked up briefly, and then he launched into the Beethoven. More than launched, actually, he recreated the Beethoven. I didn't know it at the time, but he was in the midst of a ten year project to record all thirty-two sonatas and he was playing three or four a year in these concerts. I don't remember what he played that day or on the two or three more occasions I had over the next few years to hear him play, but I was so pleased with his performance that I tried not to miss any opportunity to hear him play.

I had bought this set some years ago and have had the occasion recently to study it. (I'm on this jag to start enjoying all the good stuff I have while I'm still kicking.) After listening to the set a few times, I felt that I had this bag of jewels and I could put my hand in and out would come this jewel or that jewel and each jewel was as beautiful as the others. In this set, there's not a bad jewel in the bunch.

So now, quoth he, what about this set? You will find that Goode has an impressive dynamic range and that the architecture of his interpretations is very cohesive: he's put a lot of thought into structure and the results are very convincing. His playing is pellucid, with hardly any blurring due to pedal. When he does blur, it's clearly for effect. He has a magnificent technique and he plays with the energetic forthrightness that is required by the music, but his playing is not strident. He prefers subtle coloring effects and precise rhythms to express the deeper dimensions of these pieces. One thing you will notice is that his hands are absolutely independent. For example, he does this trick throughout: he'll begin a crescendo, but the right hand will `crescend' sooner than the left- and the left may actually get louder and softer while the right hand continues. It makes the playing very colorful.

And now some specifics: (things that I especially like)
Sonata #2, third mvt, Scherzo
#5, third mvt, Finale (here is one place that I really get the sense of the terrific architectural coherence of his playing)
#6, third mvt, Presto: fun
#'s 10,11, 12- three gems.
#10, first mvt, Allegro
#10, third mvt, Allegro assai: perfection.
#12, fourth mvt, Allegro
#13, second mvt, Allegro molto vivace: specifically timing/rhythm
#15
#18, first mvt, Allegro
#21, last two mvts, very contemplative interpretations, different. I think I prefer Schnabel here, especially last mvt.
#26, Das Lebwohl, Les Adieux. I think this is my favorite performance of this sonata, especially the last mvt. RG brings out all the joy that Beethoven must have felt on the return of his friend and patron.
#29, fourth mvt, Fuga. Very powerful reading. (Aside: compare the music here with the Grosse Fuge, Op 133 String quartet.)
#30, another great reading. I especially like the third mvt, variations #'s II & IV
#31 L'inversione della fuga: very powerful reading

Back in the days when I was working with Kamitsuka, I asked him who his favorite living pianists were. He said Martha Argerich was `pretty good'. That's about as high a compliment as he was willing to make for any living pianist. (He had a lot to say about bad pianists.) Then some time later RG came out with a Brahms CD. I said to Kamitsuka, `You know, John, Richard Goode just came out with a cd of Brahms late works.' He looked at me briefly and then looked away out the window that had a view of the Palisades in New Jersey and said, `Oh yeah? Hmm... it must be pretty good.'


So, hope you enjoy these as much as I have.


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a classic

I recommend this set without hesitation to anyone considering a complete cycle of Beethoven's piano sonatas. Goode delivers powerful, thoughtful, sophisticated, assured performances across the board here. Furthermore these readings strike an excellent balance between subject and object, style and substance; and the architecture, the structure and form of the music is thoroughly understood and incorporated into Goode's interpretations (one of the most difficult tasks of classical musicians).

These discs make for an excellent benchmark in any collection, then. That is to say, while you will certainly want to hear other readings of certain of these sonatas---Pollini's almost religious combination of majesty and a sense of inner peace in the late sonatas, for example, or Kempff's indulgent elan in the better-know, "named" sonatas---Goode delivers outstanding, balanced performances that are as effective in the early, Haydn-esque sonatas as they are in the mysterious, ethereal late works.

These works take pride of place amongst humanity's very greatest acheivements; in music of such sublime depth there can of course be no final word or "definitive" interpretation. Nevertheless you can't go wrong with Goode's set. What a treasure!


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reviews: 1, 2, page 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8



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