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| ARTIST: | Schubert |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Regis Records |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | I. Allegro moderato, II Andante, III. Allegro, I. Allegro giusto, II. Andante, III. Allegro vivace, No.2 in E flat major - allegro, No.4 in A flat major-allegretto |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 604043151424 |
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Customer Reviews of Sviatoslav Richter Plays Schubert
Richter excels in Schubert as always These are recordings that were made during one of Sviatoslav Richter's Japan tours. They date from February 1979, Tokyo. Exactly the same disc has been published before on the Olympia label but for some reason it was removed from the catalogue. Regis Records have been so smart to pick the disc up and publish it again. They took care of a bigger part of the Olympia heritage, however: a search for 'richter regis' will find you about seven discs that are all very well worth it.
So far the external information; on to the disc itself. It includes Schubert's A major D664 sonata, the A minor D784 and the E flat and A flat impromptus D899. Schubert's music was a terrain at which Richter felt particularly at home, possibly because his own character had many similarities with Schubert's music. Additionally, this music only asks for minimal virtuosity, but utmost musicality. It was therefore an excellent terrain to show how much he had to offer apart from his legendary technique. He often succeeded in that and he was surely among the best Schubert players in history. There are some moments I wondered if a younger Richter wouldn't have played a little better (he was nearly 65 here) but generally this is an indispensable document.
First there is the D664 A Major sonata, one of Schubert's sunniest compositions, with a dreamy first part that has a continually returning main theme, a peaceful Andante and finally a joyous finale. Richter takes the first movement at quite a broad tempo but that only adds to its beauty. He reads the music exceptionally well, is extremely expressive all the way through and seems to be in total relaxation, just as Schubert must have been when he wrote it. It's twelve minutes of pure music he delivers with that first movement, and however often the main theme returns, I really can't get enough of its beauty. I wish Richter had recorded the somewhat similar D959's final too! OK, and if you hadn't been lulled into total tranquillity yet, the sublimely serene second movement will help. The final movement is sublime too, but in another way: its quirky changes between loud chords and runs and charming dancing-steps are brought out like never before. Richter's great dynamic variety is most welcome here. Sometimes he pounds quite hard but it's never disturbing. A most humorous and charming finish, after all.
The A minor sonata is something quite different. The whole piece breathes an exceptionally sad mood: be it the first part with its frequent outbursts, the falsely quiet second part or the disturbing finale, with some passages that sound like a danse macabre. Richter is again exceptional in this work, though I wish he would have used the pedal a little more frequently in the louder passages. Now it can sound unnecessarily rough at times. But it's not that bad after all. And it's good to hear that Richter, unlike Brendel or Zacharias to name two, dares to play every ff indication in the first movement really fortissimo and nothing less. The quieter parts of the piece are governed masterfully, once again. Sometimes I get the idea that Richter is somewhat too much relaxed, but he handles the gripping first movement very well at any rate. The solemnity of the second part comes out well too though I'd like a little more strength in the section after 25 measures (at 2'10). And as you might expect, he is his whole self in the third movement, that's almost made for him, with its wild runs that make me think of Prokofiev at times. Apart from then high speed and angriness he exposes, I also like his excellent voicing for the left hand: no note remains hidden. At the end sequence, I miss that little bit of pedalling that would have made it really excellent. He does a very impressive job with the whole sonata anyway, although he might have been even better at this at an earlier age.
That is the case with the two Impromptus anyway. Richter plays the E flat impromptu very neatly and correctly and all, but his earlier accounts (like the one of the 1958 Sofia recital) are far more driven and intense. This rendition is quite bland, as a result: especially the coda doesn't have half the fire of his stormy Prague rendition. The same is effectively true of the A flat: nice but for the edge-of-your-seat-readings go elsewhere. Olympia/Regis could have included better fillers than these anyway.
This is what we get however, and with two commanding and superior readings of two sonatas the disc is recommendable enough. At a basement price, as well. Of course, it depends on your taste if you really NEED this (for some 10 dollars more you can get the excellent 5-disc Schubert set by Christian Zacharias on EMI, for example) but it's a good choice at any rate. For some rays of sunshine with the A major sonata and a dark world in the A minor, this an excellent disc.