Chopin: Complete Piano Music | Frederic Chopin, Robert Stankovsky, ... | 5 stars for value, 4 for performance, 3 for packaging and mastering
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Chopin: Complete P...
Chopin: Complete Piano Music
Frederic Chopin
,
Robert Stankovsky
, ...
Naxos, 1999
average customer review:
based on 8 reviews
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highly recommended
This 15-disc set, recorded from 1990 to 1992, is a truly
complete
survey of
Chopin
's
piano
music
, including juvenilia and the works for piano and orchestra. It may not be quite the triumph of Biret's Brahms set, in which the performances are competitive with the best to be heard anywhere. But all of this playing is thoroughly worthy of the music, and Biret's technique is strong enough to deal with such hurdles as the Études and Scherzi without flinching. Her style is a bit more straightforward than that of the most famous Chopin poets (such as Rubinstein and Cortot), making these recordings a particularly good bet for students and listeners who are first learning to love Chopin. One can often come up with a (more expensive) recording that expresses even more of the poetry of the music than Biret does: Moravec's Nocturnes, Rubinstein's Mazurkas, Zayas's Études, and so on. And occasionally some of the lesser-known music (such as the First Sonata) might be better skipped except by scholars and curious listeners who want to know why these pieces are so obscure. But finding 15 well-filled CDs of such great music, in such excellent performances, so well recorded, for such an absurdly low price becomes an irresistible bargain. Even connoisseurs who know the great Chopin recordings of the past may well find these recordings a refreshing alternate view of the music. --Leslie Gerber
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Great!
I really enjoyed listening to Biret's approach of
chopin
on these 15 discs. I have heard other pianists play and i personally find every one of them comparable and each have their own pros and cons. The price of this influenced me over the grammophon's boxset.
5 stars for value, 4 for performance, 3 for packaging and mastering
I got this box set because I wanted to have all of
Chopin
's
piano
music
without investing in the redundancies of various artists' recordings. In that respect the price value is unbeatable. Much has been said about Idil Biret's playing and it is fine enough.
The packaging is unimaginative. You get the fifteen individual CDs of the series tucked into a slip case. That's a lot of jewel box plastic and shelf space that could have been cut down to at least half. The booklets give thumbnail analyses of the works, but much of the historical background is repeated. Fifteen iterations of "Interpreting Chopin" and Biret's biography is just a waste of paper. Naxos has made its name with quality, no-frills, budget releases. They may have done a cost analysis against repackaging but there seems little consideration toward the end user experience.
The mastering is careless. In the Variations and Sonatas, for instance, the attack for one track happens at the tail end of the previous track. This becomes evident and annoying when listening on an MP3 player. You get First movement-S[squib-pause]econd movement resumed. If the track indexing was done by an automated system they should have calibrated it a few milliseconds earlier. If it was done manually, shame on you.
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Worth the price, but you get what you pay for
Ms. Gerber sums it up very well above: the playing is not what you'd find from Rubinstein, Cortot, or Ashkenazy, but it is still better than many recordings out there, and is a tremendous bargain.
Chopin
only wrote one piece in his entire life that didn't include the
piano
, so a collection this
complete
of his piano
music
is a fascinating look into Chopin's creative life, and as a study in music history, it is worth the time. Nevertheless, people who are searching out definitive performances of more familiar works should probably search elsewhere.
Now, I am not a professional music critic, and I would never say that you should trust me over the critics. In fact, much of the acclaim this set receives is merited. Her first and fourth ballades are fine performances, and the scherzi and polonaise in A flat are well executed. That being said, I personally found several other performances to be large disappointments. (For the record, her recording was not universally praised, and some of the favourable reviews, like mine, are somewhat back-handed, but overall the set was a critical success.)
In particular, I couldn't help but think that the Berceuse, third ballade, several of the preludes, the First Concerto, and the Barcarolle were mediocre. In the Barcarolle, Biret's tempi are erratic and constantly changing, sometimes in the opposite way as Chopin indicated! (Where Chopin writes "poco piu mosso" at the transition to the B section, Biret slows to a crawl) Her dynamics are similarly strange and sometimes backward, and the climax is rushed and unmoving. For the third Opus 28 Prelude in e minor--probably one of the best-known preludes after the Raindrop in D flat--Biret takes almost a full measure's worth to play the opening figure (which is written to last one beat), and then proceeds to choose an allegretto tempo despite Chopin's directions to play slowly. She indulges here, and throughout much of the rest of the CDs, in a rubato that breaks momentum and makes it very difficult to follow the melody. It is as if a singer were to take a breath in the middle of important words--it quickly becomes hard to understand a thing she was saying.
It is true that many performers deviate from the score, sometimes in ways that enhance the musicality of the performance. Indeed, even Chopin was reported to play with dynamics that were different than the ones he himself wrote in the score, but Biret's indulgences take away from, rather than add to, the performances. I personally found many of the interpretative decisions to be distracting, or even unmusical.
I don't mean this to sound at all mean-spirited, but if I were to sum up my feelings of this set in one sentence, it would be this:
It is worth every dollar of its relatively low price.
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A good box set w/ some weaknesses
This is a "must have" for anyone who is into
piano
music
or who has played
Chopin
as a student--like myself. It is the most comprehensive set I know of, and the performance levels are consistently above average. Also, the recording quality in general is good (some of these lower-priced CDs have weak signals and/or muffled sound--but not this set).
However, there are some parts where the pieces are either badly played or too weirdly interpreted. For examle, Idil Biret is a very, very good pianist with a range of emotions and tremendous skills...or so I thought until I heard her Etude #12 (Vol. #2), which is by far THE WORST I have ever heard by anyone, including my peers back in the music school. I don't know if she meant to interpret it the way she played it, but it's a mess! She rushes through some of the notes while overemphasizing and stretching others unnecessarily. So much so that she almost makes it sound as though she doesn't have strong enough skills to play this piece (which, I am sure, isn't the case--but it sounds like it).
But, still, it is a good buy overall.
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reviews
:
page 1
,
2
Tracks
Ballades - Berceuse - Fantaisie - Trois nouvelles études - Galop Marquis - Largo - Marche funèbre - Cantabile | Ballade No.2 In F Major, Op.38 | Ballade No.3 In A Flat Major, Op.47 | Ballade No.4 In F Minor, Op.52 | Berceuse In D Flat Major, Op.57 | No.1 In F Minor | No.2 In A Flat Major | No.3 In D Flat Major | Fantaisie In F Minor, Op.49 | Galop Marquis In A Flat Major | Largo In E Flat Major, BI 109 | Marche Funebre | Cantabile In B Flat Major | Etudes | No.2 In A Minor | No.3 In E Major | No.4 In C Sharp Minor | No.5 In G Flat Major, 'Black Keys' | No.6 In E Flat Minor | No.7 In C Major | No.8 In F Major | No.9 In F Minor | No.10 In A Flat Major | No.11 In E Flat Major | No.12 In C Minor, 'Revolutionary' | No.1 In A Flat Major | No.2 In F Minor | No.3 In F Major | No.4 In A Minor | No.5 In E Minor | No.6 In G Sharp Minor | No.7 In C Sharp Minor | No.8 In D Flat Major | No.9 In G Flat Major | No.10 In B Minor | No.11 In A Minor, 'Winter Wind' | No.12 In C Minor | Mazurkas - Volume 1 | No.2 In C Sharp Minor, Op.6/2 | No.3 In E Major, Op.6/3 | No.4 In A Flat Minor, Op.6/4 | No.5 In B Flat Major, Op.7/1 | No.6 In A Minor, Op.7/2 | No.7 In F Minor, Op.7/3 | No.8 In A Flat Major, Op.7/4 | No.9 In C Major, Op.7/5 | No.10 In B Flat Major, Op.17/1 | No.11 In E Minor, Op.17/2 | No.2 In A Flat Major, Op.17/3 | No.13 In A Minor, Op.17/4 | No.14 In G Minor, Op.24/1 | No.15 In C Major, Op.24/2 | No.16 In A Flat Major, Op.24/3 | No.17 In B Flat Minor, Op.24/4 | No.18 In C Minor, Op.30/1 | No.19 In B Minor, Op.30/2 | No.20 In D Flat Major, Op.30/3 | No.21 In G Sharp Minor, Op.30/4 | No.22 In G Sharp Minor, Op.33/1 | No.23 In D Major, Op.33/2 | No.24 In C Major, Op.33/3 | No.25 In B Minor, Op.33/4 | No.26 In C Sharp Minor, Op.41/1 | Mazurkas - Volume 2 | No.28 In B Major, Op.41/3 | No.29 In A Flat Major, Op.41/4 | No.30 In G Major, Op.50/1 | No.31 In A Flat Major, Op.50/2 | No.32 In C Sharp Minor, Op.50/3 | No.33 In B Major, Op56/1 | No.34 In C Major, Op.56/2 | No.35 In C Minor, Op.56/3 | No.36 In A Minor, Op.59/1 | No.37 In A Flat Major, Op.59/2 | No.38 In F Sharp Minor, Op.59/3 | No.39 In B Major, Op.63/1 | No.40 In F Minor, Op.63/2 | No.41 In C Sharp Minor, Op.63/3 | No.42 In G Major, Op.67/1 | No.43 In G Minor, Op.67/2 | No.44 In C Major, Op.67/3 | No.45 In A Minor, Op.67/4 | No.46 In C Major, Op.68/1 | No.47 In A Minor, Op.68/2 | No.48 In F Major, Op.68/3 | No.49 In F Minor, Op.68/4 | No.50 In A Minor, Op. Posth. | No.51 In A Minor, Op. Posth. | Nocturnes - Volume 1 | E Flat Major, Op.9, No.2 | B Major, Op.9, No.3 | F Major, Op.15, No.1 | F Sharp Major, Op.15, No.2 | G Minor, Op.15, No.3 | C Sharp Minor, Op.27, No.1 | D Flat Major, Op.27, No.2 | B Major, Op.32, No.1 | A Flat Major, Op.32, No.2 | C Minor, B.I. 108 | C Sharp Minor, B.I. 49 | Nocturnes - Volume 2 | G Major, Op.37, No.2 | C Minor, Op.48, No.1 | F Sharp Minor, Op.48, No.2 | F Minor, Op.55, No.1 | E Flat Major, Op.55, No.2 | B Major, Op.62, No.1 | E Major, Op.62, No.2 | E Minor, Op.72, No.1 (Posth.) | Piano Sonatas | Menuetto | Larghetto | Fianle | Grave - Doppio Movimento | Scherzo | Marche Funebre: Lento | Finale: Presto | Allegro Maestoso | Scherzo: Molto Vivace | Largo | Finale: Presto, Non Tanto | Polonaises - Volume 1 | E Flat Minor, Op.26, No.2 | A Major, Op.40, No.1, 'Military' | C Minor, Op.40, No.2 | F Sharp Minor, Op.44 | A Flat Major, Op.53, 'Heroic' | A Flat Major, Op.61, 'Polonaise-Fantaisie' | Polonaises - Volume 2 | B Flat Major, Op.71, No.2 | F Minor, Op.71, No.3 | G Minor, BI 1 | B Flat Major, BI 3 | A Flat Major, BI 5 | G Sharp Minor, BI 6 | B Flat Minor, 'Adieu', BI 13 | G Flat Major, BI 36 | Andante Spianato | Grande Polonaise | Preludes (Including "The Raindrop) - Barcarolle - Bolero | No.2 | No.3 | No.4 | No.5 | No.6 | No.7 | No.8 | No.9 | No.10 | No.11 | No.12 | No.13 | No.14 | No.15 | No.16 | No.17 | No.18 | No.19 | No.20 | No.21 | No.22 | No.23 | No.24 | Prelude In A Flat Major, Op. Posth. | Prelude In C Sharp Minor, Op.45 | Barcarolle, Op.60 | Bolero, Op.19 | Bourree I | Bourree II | Wiosna | Feuille D'Album | Fugue | Rondos and Variations | Rondo A La Mazurka, Op.5 | Rondo, Op.16 | Rondo, Op.73 | Mazurka In G Major, BI 16 | Mazurka In B Flat Major, BI 16 | Mazurka In B Flat Major, BI 73 | Mazurka In C Major, BI 82 | Mazurka In A Flat Major, BI 7 | Mazurka In D Major, BI 4 | Variations Brillantes, Op.12 | Variations On A German Air | Variations On A March From Bellini's I Puritani | Variations 'Souvenir De Paganini' | Variations In D Major For Two Pianos | Scherzi and Impromptus - Allegro de concert | No.2 In B Flat Minor, Op.31 | No.3 In C Sharp Minor, Op.39 | No.4 In E Major, Op.54 | No.1 In A Flat Major, Op.29 | No.2 In F Sharp Major, Op.36 | No.3 In G Flat Major, Op.51 | No.4 In C Sharp Minor, Op.66, 'Fantaisie-Impromptu' | Allegro De Concert, Op.46 | Waltzes - Contredanse - Ecossaises - Tarantelle | In A Flat Major, Op.34/1 | In A Minor, Op.34/2 | In F Major, Op.34/3 | Valse In A Flat Major, Op.42 | Valse In D Flat Major, Op.64/1, 'Minute' | Valse In C Sharp Minor, Op.64/2 | Valse In A Flat Major, Op.64/3 | Valse In A Flat Major, Op.69/1, 'L'adieu' | Valse In B Minor, Op.69/2 | Valse In G Flat Major, Op.70/1 | Valse In F Minor, Op.70/2 | Valse In D Flat Major, Op.70/3 | Valse In A Flat Major, BI 21 | Valse In E Major, BI 44 | Valse In E Minor, BI 56 | Valse In A Minor, BI 150 | Valse In E Flat Major, BI 133, 'Sostenuto' | Valse In E Flat Major, BI 46 | Contredanse In G Flat Major, BI 17 | No.1 In D Major | No.2 In G Major | No.3 In D Flat Major | Tarantelle In A Flat Major, Op.43 | Piano Concertos Nos. 1 and 2 | Romanza: Larghetto | Rondo: Vivace | Maestoso | Larghetto | Allegretto Vivace | Fantasia on Polish Airs - Krakowiak - Variations on "Là ci darem la mano" Andante spianato and Grande Polonaise | Air: Juz Miesiac Zaszedi: Andantino | Theme De Charles Kurpinski: Allegretto | Kujawiak: Vivace | Allegro Maestoso | Scherzo: Molto Vivace | Introduction: Largo | Tema: Allegretto | Variation I: Brillante | Variation II: Veloce, Ma Accuratamente | Variation III: Sempre Sostenuto | Variation IV: Con Bravura | Variation V: Adagio - Alla Polacca | Introduction: Andantino Quasi Allegretto | Rondo: Allegro Non Troppo
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