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Beethoven, Schumann: Piano Works
Ludwig van Beethoven, Robert Schumann, Jonathan Biss
Beethoven, Schumann: Piano Works
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (24) - Disc #1

Biss, who has been getting much attention in the American music world, makes his recording debut at the age of 23 with a challenging program. He wisely places the Beethoven Fantasy first. To many listeners, this unfamiliar...  more »

     
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Biss, who has been getting much attention in the American music world, makes his recording debut at the age of 23 with a challenging program. He wisely places the Beethoven Fantasy first. To many listeners, this unfamiliar piece, written in the style of an improvisation, will be an arresting introduction to the program. To those familiar with the music, Biss's compelling intensity will demonstrate his credentials: here is a pianist with something to say. Competition in the other two works is stronger, and you can't say Biss blows it away. But his Schumann is strongly and expressively played, with almost the ultimate amount of contrast you want in this wild music. The Beethoven Sonata, performed here with all the necessary repeats, has been recorded by dozens of famous pianists. Biss is already somewhere in the top echelon, bringing drama and excitement to the music. Someday he may play the finale even more powerfully, but he already causes plenty of tingles. At EMI's "Debut" series super-bargain price, this disc would be worth having even if all you want is the Beethoven Fantasy. --Leslie Gerber
 

CD Reviews

An Introduction to Jonathan Biss
Grady Harp | Los Angeles, CA United States | 02/17/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jonathan Biss is rapidly becoming known as one of our more important young pianists on the concert stage today. His technique is dazzling, his involvement with the works he elects to perform is respectful of the composers' markings and relates to the spirit of the music from the period of the time of composition, and he manages to draw his audiences into the music with his straightforward 'music first' approach. He is very much on the ascent and EMI Classics is to be commended for allowing his recording introduction in 2004 with this VERY affordable CD of works by Beethoven and Schumann. Yes, he has grown in depth and finesse since this four-year old recording as we would expect from a serious artist of his young years, but this CD is still a superb recital.



Opening with Beethoven's 'Fantasy in G minor', Biss immediately demonstrates his mastery of technique as well as his beautifully managed phrasing. Following is Schumann's 'Davidsbündlertänze' in as satisfying a performance as is available from the recordings of the older masters. The recital closes with Beethoven's 'Appassionata Sonata in F minor' and it is here that the combination of technique and musicality are best wedded. Biss is an intelligent, articulate and communicative pianist as his subsequent recordings and performances have proved. This CD may have been a 'beginning' but it is one that belongs in the libraries of all lovers of superb piano performances. Grady Harp, February 08"
Fine Beethoven and Schumann from Biss
John Kwok | New York, NY USA | 02/26/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Jonathan Biss is yet another young pianist who has been garnering rave reviews for his playing, and here, in his CD debut, he shows why. Much to his credit, this fine CD opens with a glistening performance of the Beethoven Fantasy, replete with Biss' technically proficient, rhapsodic playing. His Schumann is some of the best I have heard in a while, played with ample expression and technical brilliance, showing why he deserves to be regarded as among our finest contemporary concert pianists. His version of Beethoven's Appassionata won't persuade me to overlook superb versions I have heard from the likes of Ashkenazy, Brendel and Kempff, however, to his credit, it is a fine performance in his own right (Though I concur with another customer review that the fourth movement isn't nearly as dramatic as it could be.). Judging from this recording, Biss should have a long, distinguished career as an interpreter of Beethoven and Schumann."
Well=paced and direct playing,no nonsense romantic here
scarecrow | Chicago, Illinois United States | 02/10/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"I didn't find any interpretive problems here with the Appassionata, yes the pacing, the momentum tells the entire story in Beethoven, for he was a purveyor of music materials, scales, figures melodic, shapes, thrusts, chord progressions, developmental schemes, variations,all to be manipulated,truncated; he never wrote what you might say is a "beautiful" melody, he was far smarter than that, and interested in music's other parameters. Biss here keeps, maintains this momentum (the First movement)and again you must listen for the larger sweeps of phrases not from moment to moment, for that could be fine, but the larger phrases need to be correct, to be rhythmically on the mark,something Leonard Meyer referred to as the architetonic dimension of pulse and rhythmThe last movement tells the entire story, here if you begin it too, fast, you had better run, hide someplace, for F minor will be a key that will never forgive you.Biss understands this here whether intellectually or intuitively he has it. There was some nice moments in the Beethoven you feel that he wants to push it at times but that only leads to a dangerous abyss. No he doesn't have the mature vision of Rubenstein or Richter but he's there pitching with them noentheless.



This is the best Schumann I've heard in a while, incredibly lyrical,like Biss is playing the "pop" tunes of the day. He has a wonderful sense of melodic direction, knows where things are going, a phrase, and knows what such a melody might do to one, he nurtures this quite well.Biss seems to understand the points in Schumann that could be boring,like his mundane accompanimental figures, or the obvious chordal fills, you must nurture these as well, for chordal display is important in Schumann. He is difficult to interpret, like Haydn, there is no "kugles" manufactures for each of them,so it is music you must work at. Schumann can be difficult unless you do emotion "root canal" work as Michelangeli sometimes, exploring the extremes of Schumann's aesthetic, like he was a mad man, well mad men make incredible music we know, and isn't hte transgressive, the irrational an important part in dealing with the romantic credos. Schumann saved Romanticism from the tyranny of Beethoven's symphonic revolution, he saved it with the private, introspective, parochial lifeworlds to explore. Likewise Biss's "Fantasy in G Minor" of Ludwig has the same discipline required, impassioned but not overly so.

There is another recording I beleive of Biss playing the Appasionata, for I heard even more balance and numance in that one."