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Beethoven: The 5 Piano Concertos
Ludwig van Beethoven, Simon Rattle, Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Beethoven: The 5 Piano Concertos
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #3

Though some musicians rerecord the same repertoire, refining the same concept over time, Alfred Brendel's Beethoven concertos change significantly with every go-around. One of the defining influences in this latest go-arou...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ludwig van Beethoven, Simon Rattle, Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, Alfred Brendel
Title: Beethoven: The 5 Piano Concertos
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Philips
Release Date: 4/6/1999
Genre: Classical
Styles: Forms & Genres, Concertos, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830), Instruments, Keyboard, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 3
SwapaCD Credits: 3
UPC: 028946278123

Synopsis

Amazon.com essential recording
Though some musicians rerecord the same repertoire, refining the same concept over time, Alfred Brendel's Beethoven concertos change significantly with every go-around. One of the defining influences in this latest go-around is conductor Simon Rattle. He's one of the stronger minded and truly collaborative conductors that Brendel has ever had, and his bent toward historically informed performance inspires the pianist to a radical reevaluation, resulting in interpretations that achieve a new level of cogency over his previous take. Phrases have an even greater sense of purpose and direction than ever before, forming tiny, mosaic-like entities within the music, often accompanied by something rarely heard from Brendel: rubato. At his considerable best, Brendel's playing has a great sense of inevitability amid the surprises that always come with a great musical mind approaching the music afresh. The only letdown here is the "Emperor" concerto. Although excellent, the reading is just a tad conventional. If you'd like to delve deeper into Beethoven's concertos, you'll enjoy Leon Plantinga's thorough study of all the composer's essays in the genre. --David Patrick Stearns
 

CD Reviews

Very good but not the best
J. Buxton | Waltham, MA United States | 01/13/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)

"Several other reviewers seem to be reviewing other sets, for example DG's Complete Beethoven set. My review is for the Brendel/Rattle set of the five piano concertos. Overall it is a good set, and generally better than Brendel's other two recordings of the complete concertos. However, I must admit to a little disappointment with nos. 1 and 5, the Emperor. I think this stems mostly from the recording quality, which is just average. I think the orchestra's contribution cannot be heard as well as some other sets (Zimmerman on DG, and Ashkenazy with Cleveland on Decca), which is a pity since the Vienna Phil. does perform well as usual. I also thought Brendel's playing is a bit sloppy on the Fifth, almost as though he misses some notes. It doesn't seem like he and the orchestra are in perfect sync. The price is too high as others have noted. I'm also surprised by how highly praised this set was by both Gramophone magazine and the new Penguin Guide. I think they missed the boat. If you are buying the complete set, you might try Kempff with the Berlin Philharmonic on DG, Zimmerman with Bernstein on DG (particularly if you like the Vienna sound), or Ashkenazy as pianist and conductor with Cleveland on Decca. Any of these sets will bring lasting listening pleasure."
Brendel's always changing, refining
J. Buxton | 12/28/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)

"For anybody who is looking for the best set of Beethoven Concerto Performances on C.D. you would always have to consider Brendel. In matter of fact, if Brendel has recorded it all, whatever it may be, you would have to consider it. Such is the possibility with him that you may get a truly inspired, thought-out and before unheard approach to a work. He has more than his share of recordings that attain that level. He is a musician that can play a piece a hundred times and you would still find something fresh in his playing. These recordings are no different. Even though I own his superlative, re-mastered LIVE performances with the CSO, Levine conducting I eagerly bought the VPO, Rattle collection anxiously waiting to here his latest revelations on these masterworks. After reading the linear notes about how the VPO and Brendel had a special association I thought I was going to here sparks. Unfortunately, most of the sparks come from Brendel with just a few exciting touches from Rattle. The playing of the VPO was far from what I expected, unclear, not pretty for the most part. Their playing pales next to the CSO's although I was expecting playing of the highest caliber. Plus Brendel's earlier live recording can not be beat for the thrill of hearing superb music making being created live on the spot for generations to come to hear. That recording is truly the one to own and at a steep discount to this one, I would find it incredible if any account mentioned in any other review here or anywhere else will ever be as incredible as those performances are. I personally need to hear none other than the early Brendel set in it's re-mastered format.These performances only improve on the earlier set in the slow movement of the 4th and the conclusion(after the cadenza) of opening movement of the 3rd. The drama of the slow movement is fully carried out and the excitment of the cadence of the Third's opening movement is more successfully realized than in the CSO version. The only Beethoven Concerto cycle recording Brendel doesn't beat out with this set is his own earlier set."
Never quite catches on fire
brad lonard | Sydney, Australia | 06/21/2001
(3 out of 5 stars)

"I was tremendously excited when I heard this set, recorded live, was in the pipeline, but actually listening to it left me somewhat disappointed. On paper, the lineup looks just about perfect: a great orchestra, one of the world's most exciting conductors, and *the* best Beethoven pianist alive. Yet the combination never quite catches fire like it's always promising to. The fact is, Rattle -- whose deeply probing musical mind has made many an old warhorse into a fresh new stallion -- doesn't seem quite at home in the Beethoven concertos. Brendel -- whose intelligence, virtuosity and mordant appreciation of wit eminently suits him to old Ludwig -- plays wonderfully, but in the end his earlier (studio) recordings of the works with Haitink are even finer and I'd recommend them over this newer set. This is surely a complete cycle of the piano concertos that has much fine playing and is extremely listenable. Perhaps it's unfair to expect more than that -- but I was."