"Highly recommended. Rubinstein's performances of the Ballades are lyrical, and the Scherzos exciting. The difference with previous issues is the SACD sound, which adds just that much more realism, the sense that the sound is "truer." A wonderful disc both artistically and sonically."
(+) Not for the Ballades or SA Sound, but for the Scherzos
C. Pontus T. | SE/Asia | 01/02/2009
(3 out of 5 stars)
"INTRODUCTION: As previously concluded in my review of the good but less than great collection of Rubinstein's Chopin outings on RCA (The Chopin Collection), his tendency 'to play everything in a similarly smooth manner with an unfailing beauty of tone' creates results that are 'never less than comfortable', but seldom very profound or memorable. Sounds like Rubinstein's Ballades are not set to be a top contender on this reviewer's short list...--but what about the Scherzos then?
REFERENCES: Ballades--Demidenko (Chopin: Ballades; Third Sonata); Scherzos--Pogorelich (Chopin: Four Scherzi)
The chief reason for buying this disc is neither the Ballades nor the Super Audio remastering, but the Scherzos. Even though being recorded at the highly respective age of 72, and in spite of some occasional technical strain (notably in the Fourth), Rubinstein's third rendition of the four Scherzos stand up surprisingly well against such dexterously notorious rivals as Pogorelich, Pletnev and Ashkenazy. Particularly the Second and Third Scherzos find Rubinstein in startlingly dashing and powerful Indian summer form.
Alas, Rubinstein's Ballades are almost as non-profound and non-memorable as expected--with the exception of the First that for some reason coaxes the very best out of the late Rubinsteinian drama department. The Second and Third are merely average whereas the Fourth is indeed beautiful but shallow.
Should you already own this disc in its CD incarnation, which boasts very decent sound considering its age and source, the Super Audio remastering doesn't really warrant a replacement purchase. That money would be put to better use in the above-mentioned 11-disc collection, normally available at less than $30 on Amazon.
"I recently bought an SACD player and thought this CD would be great to try it out. Because the recordig is old, 1959, it is improved via SACD to a 3 channel output (left, eight, center speakers). No surround. I guess I was expecting to be enveloped by sound. This did not happen because all the sound comes from teh front and being used to suround, it is noticeable. As a fan of Chopin, the music is naturally superb. Rubensteins rendition is classic. The clarity of the clarity of teh sound is noticeable and very refined. NO background hissing, feedback, or anyting else. It is completely pure piano."
Generous artistic presence
Classics Man | New York, NY | 03/04/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)
"Rubinstein's respect for the score, controlled freedom, and unerring sense of proportion prove how sanity and inspiration are not mutually exclusive interpretive properties. A few examples will suffice. For instance, when the pianist lingers over the First Ballade's E-flat major subject, he still provides a strong rhythmic backbone in the left-hand accompaniment to anchor it. Many pianists blur the Second Scherzo's famous opening triplets; instead Rubinstein articulates them without compromising their spookiness.While the aforementioned Rubinstein Edition CD appears to be mastered at a higher level, with slightly more emphasis in the bass, the SACD's overall ambience wins the day, even when reproduced on a conventional two-channel CD player."