Search - Serkin, Rostropovich, Coe :: Incomparable Rudolf Serkin (Dig)

Incomparable Rudolf Serkin (Dig)
Serkin, Rostropovich, Coe
Incomparable Rudolf Serkin (Dig)
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (14) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (6) - Disc #2


     
   

CD Details

All Artists: Serkin, Rostropovich, Coe, Abbado
Title: Incomparable Rudolf Serkin (Dig)
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 1
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Original Release Date: 1/1/2003
Re-Release Date: 5/13/2003
Genre: Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Forms & Genres, Concertos, Sonatas, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830), Romantic (c.1820-1910), Instruments, Keyboard, Strings, Symphonies
Number of Discs: 2
SwapaCD Credits: 2
UPC: 028947432821
 

CD Reviews

Illuminating
David Saemann | 08/02/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"These CDs document the last stage in Serkin's career, when his aprroach to the keyboard was less stentorian than it had been in earlier years. Serkin at this stage in his life was more adept at just letting things happen at the keyboard, rather than ploughing on through. For most listeners, the centerpiece of this set will be the performance of Beethoven's last three sonatas, recorded live in Vienna in 1987, when Serkin was 84. Except for one obvious splice in Sonata No. 31, the performances seem to be presented unedited. There are numerous finger slips, such that this could not really be recommended as someone's first recordings of these works. In spite of this, Serkin conveys the architecture of these pieces with a sureness that may not be equalled in my experience. I heard Serkin perform the Hammerklavier in the 1970's, and these performances of the last sonatas preserve a rarer sort of pianism than I remember. The last movement of No. 32 almost made me cry; it seemed to come from another world. The performance of the Brahms with Rostropovich appears to be an excellent performance. I say appears, because the sound engineering is rather pinched, with a weak and almost tinny representation of the piano. There is no such problem in the live 1988 Vienna performance of Mozart's 16th Concerto. Here the sound is excellent, with Abbado's orchestra in superb form. Serkin, at 85, no longer could command the pearly tone he had on the famous record of Concertos 19 and 20 with George Szell. Instead, one gets a highly nuanced, carefully shaded performance, a little clattery at times but always invigorating. There is nothing sentimental about Serkin's Mozart. So, this is a set one must purchase knowing what one is getting into, but with that proviso it is highly rewarding."
An inspiring sample of the aging Serkin
Santa Fe Listener | Santa Fe, NM USA | 12/05/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Serkin deserves to be called "incomparable," but not everything on this bargain two-fer does. I was well satisfied by Op. 109 and 110, the strongest parts of a live recital from Vienna in 1984, when Serkin was past eighty. Not only is there the directness and integrity one identifies with Serkin, but he almost effortlessly captures a rightness in his Beethoven, something I also associate with Schnabel, Edwin Fischer, and, very differently, Richter. But Op. 111 finds him flagging physically, and the playing flattens out rather than building to a great emotional crescendo. In the erlier sonatas Serkin compensates for his age, however, through insight and authority. The live recording by Austrian Radio is startlingly lifelike and clear, probably the best piano sound Serkin ever got.



CD 2 is more problematic. His pairing with Rostropovich in 1982 (they recorded in the Kennedy Center, where the cellist was conductor of the Naitonal Sym.) produced a set of Brahms Cello Sonatas that won critical praise, but here in Sonata no. 1 both musicians seem too relaxed, even moony. The passion and drive tht du Pre and Barenboim bring to this wonderfully passionate work are absent. DG's sound exaggerates the size of the cello, making it loom louder -- and much closer -- than the piano.



But we end on a high note with the Mozart Piano Cto. no. 16 K. 451, recorded live in 1988 under Claudio Abbado. DG wasn't always fortunate in having to catch Serkin at such an advanced age (he had just turned 85), and quite a few of the other Mozart concertos he did with Abbado seem sadly diminished. However, Serkin rouses himself to something like his old panache and brio on this occasion, and the conducting is also in high spirits. We get a last listen of the great man with a smiling flourish of D major, only slightly second best to seeing him walking down a country road in Vermont on his way to Marlboro."