“Patricia Kopatchinskaja and Fazil Say share a radical approach,
performing each musical gesture in the most vivid way, with smoothness
and tonal beauty a secondary consideration. It's undeniably exciting…
Daring, and highly individual playing…” --Gramophone
“This is far from being just another recording of the Kreutzer Sonata. Patricia Kopatchinskaja and Fazil Say share a radical approach, performing each musical gesture in the most vivid way, with smoothness and tonal beauty a secondary consideration. It's undeniably exciting, especially the first movement which, after all, is quite a wild piece, but the exaggerated shortness of many staccato notes can be quite disturbing. And in the finale, which, though it shares something of the first Presto's manic quality, has a joyful aspect, Kopatchinskaja's ultra-short, rather splashy bowing of both main themes fails to project their full melodic élan.
Like the Beethoven, the Bartók is a slightly frustrating mixture of the brilliant and the questionable, but in the Ravel the performance's radical edge is more completely successful. The first movement's out-of-key interjections are sharply characterised and drawn together by a powerful sense of line, and the spirit of the Blues movement is captured wholeheartedly, with some unusual piano sounds and spectacular violin- playing. Not surprisingly, Say's own Sonata is also beautifully played. Most imaginatively written for the two instruments and adopting a direct, uncomplicated style, four short movements chart a progression from romantic melancholy through an area of dark, grotesque struggle to an empty, bleak landscape, with a repeat of the gentle first movement as consolation. Daring, and highly individual playing – it's a CD worth investigating.” --The Gramophone Classical Musi Guide 2010
MP3 320 · 149 MB
Like the Beethoven, the Bartók is a slightly frustrating mixture of the brilliant and the questionable, but in the Ravel the performance's radical edge is more completely successful. The first movement's out-of-key interjections are sharply characterised and drawn together by a powerful sense of line, and the spirit of the Blues movement is captured wholeheartedly, with some unusual piano sounds and spectacular violin- playing. Not surprisingly, Say's own Sonata is also beautifully played. Most imaginatively written for the two instruments and adopting a direct, uncomplicated style, four short movements chart a progression from romantic melancholy through an area of dark, grotesque struggle to an empty, bleak landscape, with a repeat of the gentle first movement as consolation. Daring, and highly individual playing – it's a CD worth investigating.” --The Gramophone Classical Musi Guide 2010
MP3 320 · 149 MB


5 comentarios:
http://www.mediafire.com/?vawnibiwadhwt1n
Simply beautiful!
Wouw! I found this interesting blog today! Have already added to the list on mine: http://only-classical.blogspot.com/. Allways good music! Thank you!
Bellísimo trabajo
Gracias y ánimo, que lo están poniendo difícil
Julio
SAY, ADEMAS DE FANTASTICO PIANISTA,ES UN BUEN COMPOSITOR Y AUN TIENE MUCHO QUE DECIR,GRACIAS EXPANIUM¡¡
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