Friedman plays Mendelssohn, Chopin, Liszt
On this CD:
1. Song without Words for piano No. 3 in A major ("Jägerlied"), Op. 19b/3
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
2. Song without Words for piano No. 6 in G minor ("Venetianisches Gondellied"), Op. 19b/6
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
3. Song without Words for piano No. 12 in F sharp minor ("Venetianisches Gondollied"), Op. 30/6
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
4. Song without Words for piano No. 14 in C minor, Op. 38/2
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
5. Song without Words for piano No. 18 in A flat major ("Duetto"), Op. 38/6
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
6. Song without Words for piano No. 20 in E flat major, Op. 53/2
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
7. Song without Words for piano No. 22 in F major, Op. 53/4
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
8. Song without Words for piano No. 32 in F sharp minor, Op. 67/2
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
9. Song without Words for piano No. 47 in A major ("Kinderstück"), Op. 102/5
Composed by Felix Mendelssohn
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
10. Mazurka for piano in B flat major, Op. 7/1, CT 56
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
11. Mazurka for piano in A minor, Op. 7/2, CT 57
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
12. Mazurka for piano in F minor, Op. 7/3, CT 58
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
13. Mazurka for piano in B flat minor, Op. 24/4, CT 67
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
14. Mazurka for piano in D major, Op. 33/2, CT 73
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
15. Mazurka for piano in B minor, Op. 33/4, CT 75
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
16. Mazurka for piano in C sharp minor, Op. 41/1, CT 76
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
17. Mazurka for piano in A flat major, Op. 50/2, CT 81
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
18. Mazurka for piano in C sharp minor, Op. 63/3, CT 91
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
19. Mazurka for piano in C major, Op. 67/3, CT 94
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
20. Mazurka for piano in A minor, Op. 67/4. CT 95
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
21. Mazurka for piano in A minor, Op. 68/2, CT 97
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
22. Ballade for piano No. 3 in A flat major, Op. 47, CT 4 (Four Ballades)
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
23. Impromptu for piano F sharp major, Op. 36, CT 44
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
24. Nocturne for piano in E flat major, Op. 55/2, CT 123
Composed by Fryderyk Chopin
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
25. Hungarian Rhapsody, for piano No. 12 (aka "No. 2") in C sharp minor, S. 244/12 (LW A132/12)
Composed by Franz Liszt
Performed by Ignaz Friedman
Friedman plays Mendelssohn, Chopin, Liszt, Music, Fryderyk Chopin, Franz Liszt, Felix Mendelssohn, Ignaz Friedman, Ballade for Keyboard, Classical, Impromptu for Keyboard, Keyboard, Mazurka for Keyboard, Nocturne for Keyboard, Orchestral & Symphonic, Rhapsody for Keyboard, Song Without Words for Keyboard
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Great Pianists (series) - Ignaz Friedman plays Beethoven, Chopin, Hummel, Mendelssohn, etc.
Manufacturer: Philips ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IX8J Release Date: 1999-06-01 |
Tracks:
Tracks:
Customer Reviews:
Romantic Pianism.......2004-01-29
Friedman had a virtuoso, powerhouse technique and a romantic playing style. He played with a great sense of rhythmic freedom and individuality. Notoriously, he did not always follow strictly the notes in the score but improvised and added. His style was controversial then and, more so, today. I recently read a review of a variety of Chopin recordings which criticized Friedman's rendition of Chopin's "heroic" polonaise, opus 53, included in this collection, as mostly empty thumping. I listened and listened again to the recording and couldn't bring myself to agree.
This set includes a great variety of Chopin but none of the complete sets (say complete mazurkas, nocturnes) common in modern recordings. The sound as as good as can be expected given the age of the pressings, but undoubtedly much of Friedman's beauty of tone fails to come through. The highlight of the collection is the recording of 12 Chopin mazurkas with Friedman's intensity, rhythmic idiosyncracy, and sense of melancholy which pervades most of these pieces. They are a beautiful introduction to Chopin.
I also enjoyed the selection of 5 Chopin etudes, particularly the devilish "study in thirds", opus 25 no. 6 which captures Friedman's masterly technique. The Berceuse, opus 57 with its fluttering thirds, and the two movements presented here of Chopin's second piano sonata, opus 35 also are fine performances and show Friedman at his best.
The other major highlight of this disc for me was Friedman's performance of 9 of Mendelsson's "Songs without Words". This music is frequently underestimated. Friedman takes these pieces seriously and performs them with thought and individuality, making it difficult to conceive of these pieces as mere parlor-music.
The disc also includes several works that are infrequently heard today. I enjoyed the piano rendition of Weber's "Invitation to the Dance" which is heard most often nowadays in orchestral transcription. The short pieces by Anton Rubenstein and Hummel were also unfamiliar to me and idiomatically played.
The only large-scale work performed in full on this disc is Beethoven's "Moonlight" sonata, opus 27 no. 2. Friedman takes the first movement very slowly and the second movement somewhat ponderously. The third movement is all speed and lightening, with the long prestissimo passages blurred in some cases.
Friedman was a virtuoso performer who played in a romantic style that was greatly influential two or three generations ago but is mostly out of fashion today. But it is still a beautiful way to make music. The listener unfamiliar with this music will be moved by it and by Friedman's pianism. Listeners who know and love the piano will enjoy this great performer of the past.
The No.1 in Moiseiwitsch's Eyes.......2003-05-13
Rosenthal was simply too old when he made his first record ( Pupils of Liszt contains excellent transfer of his); and Horszowski or even Moiseiwitsch are not quite as interesting as the other three. Hofmann's superb legato touch is stunning ( only Sauer's Blue Danube was any better): piano in his hands sounds like a small but extremely refined orchestra. Some, including Rachmaninoff, ranked him the No.1 pianist of the century.
Rachmaninoff as a pianist on the other hand lacked Hofmann's glamour, but he was armed with the depth and insight of a composer, the so-called "a heart of gold", something which he compared favourably with Hofmann.
But Friedman had got the strong points of both of them. Like Hofmann, he was a child prodigy who was later landed with a Degree from Leizig University in Composition, Philosophy and Esthetics. He soon become a pupil of and later the assistant of Leschetisky.
He had composed over 100 works and had made extensive scholarly editions of music scores! And above all, he was also an enormously successful performer since his early 20's-- with a success much bigger than Horowitz. If one ever finds Schnabel ( his fellow Leschetiskian ) interesting or musically illuminating, do not miss out Friedman: Schnabel's playing tells you WHAT IS MUSIC, but Friedman's tells you WHAT MUSIC IS!
What Friedman undertook and succeeded in doing was most challenging: he didn't just capture life but recreated it in his music. (Cortot did that too but only in a different way.) This involves a lot of originality and imagination. His rhythm is full of life. (Cortot's was instead full of dreams and adventures!) His Mazurkas well illustrated this point: the beats are organized in accordance with the movements of the dancers, not with the metronome. The balance of both his hands are so subtle and again so full of life. Pedal was so sparingly and carefully used...
Needless to say, other pieces including his own are equally interesting. There is so much drama in his music, more than either Hofmann or Rachmaninoff. The rhythm,the skeleton of music is astoundingly under control and the colour, the so called flesh and blood of music, is amazingly beyond the imagination of Horowitz on whom his influence was quite strong. ( But Horowitz simply lacked one whole dimension! ) He had a technique even more colossal than Rachmaninoff: his repertoire is virtually limitless, and he could play, especially his left hand, as daring as Cziffra plus Rachmaninoff's depth and above all, with more colours! It's as if his ten fingers are literally independent, each capble of creating a different timbre, a different rhythm and yet the whole thing is as subtle and breathing as if with life. Yes, you can really feel the breath and pulses of his music: a four-dimensional playing something which so far on record ONLY a few like D'albert, De Greef and Erno Dohnanyi were capble of ( but the colour of the latters are not so well captured ). And he played music more from a performer's ( like Horowitz ) rather than from a composer's point of view like Rachmaninoff.
That helps to explain why Friedman's playing is so fresh and exciting and why Moiseiwitsch ranked him the No.1.
A Pianist of the Highest Calibre.......2003-02-13
Friedman was most imaginative in breathing life into music and his mazurkas are particularly vivid and exciting. Some may criticise him for taking the liberty of some more notee and another octave here and there to bring out more colour and sensation. But each performer has his own whims and hence showmanship. In Europe Friedman was a huge success having given literally thousands of concerts so much so that even Horowitz felt flattered to have him attending one of his recitals, and Casal often teamed up with him playing chamber music.
In terms of talents, he compares favourably with Horowitz as he had a colossal musical background very much parallel to Hofmann save that he had a decent education something which both Hofmann and Horowitz lacked. The result, he arranged and composed so much music with such ease that Horowitz could only dream of. Even in terms of technique, no matter it was sight-reading or memory, Friedman was even more exciting. But the American audience for some obscure reason was not particularly impressed.
In this regard, Friedman wasn't alone. Arrau and even Cortot until very recently weren't very popular either. Even then, Dohnanyi, Egon Petri, Backhaus and quite a few more were allowed to go into oblivion!! Brendel is more fortunate but not as much as he deserves. Thus being the fate of the artists. Yes, most preposterous and that partly explains the need and worth of showmanship.
Poor marketing these CDs may be, but there are some who are not sure who Ignaz Friedman was, nor Leschetizky nor even Czerny. How can we expect them to buy a 4CD box set, when a 2 CD set is already too much a luxury! Buy them unless you can afford the 4CD set, they are such a treasure.
Worth it for the mazurkas.......2001-07-17
GREAT playing, bad marketing.......2001-03-20
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Friedman plays Mendelssohn, Chopin, Liszt
Manufacturer: Biddulph Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B00000IMI1 Release Date: 1999-04-20 |
Tracks:
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