DIGITAL TO ANALOG CONVERSION, getting the bits to my speakers
Banner

Posts Tagged ‘schumann’

Day 145. Schumann, Allegri and Sciarrino.

Sunday, September 5th, 2010


Quick post tonight… following the big chunk of Brahms last night is a four disc set of Schumann’s piano music played by Wilhelm Kempff. Also in the stack was a disc of Sciarrino’s violin caprices and a disc of Allegri’s vocal music.

I have the op. 17 Fantasie on right now. It is a piece I just love, and don’t get to hear often enough. Kempff’s recording is quite good (though there is a recording with Richter that I like a little more). Whenever I hear it, it makes me want to be a better piano player. It is a piece I would really like to be able to play one day. And while I don’t think I’m too late, I do think that to play this piece (and really, most of the great literature) you need to be able to play it and sit with it for decades. And sooner or later, there just won’t be decades left for me to spend on these pieces. I haven’t been playing enough recently. I need to figure out a way to start making it part of a daily routine again.

The part of this piece that I think can make or break a performance is the last measures of the first movement, the silence between movements one and two, and the the first chords of the second. The relationships of dynamics, breath and tone seems to be so difficult to achieve in this piece… end the first movement too loudly, and you are stuck. The second movement needs to start brilliantly, but not bombastically, and if you end the first movement too loudly you would have to pound the keys for the second which would ruin those initial chords.  Come in too soon, and you are a runner not pacing themselves. How can you learn the exact touch, timing and feeling needed to do this in a week? Or a year? It needs time for you, as a player, to mess it up again and again so you can figure out how it needs to be done. And once you’ve found that it needs to set into your bones and age with you.

Day 104. Kempff (playing Schumann and Brahms).

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Tonight’s rips were a 5 CD ‘Original Masters’ DG collection of Wilhelm Kempff recordings from the 1950s. I love Kempff’s playing, and this set is nicely done (from mostly mono recordings, they sound superb). Most of the set consists of Schumann and Brahms, but the last disc contains three Beethoven sonatas and a smattering of transcriptions (including some Bach, Couperin and Rameau). His playing in these earlier 50s recordings is a bit more forceful (especially his Schumann Symphonic Etudes… they are amazing). The set also brought me another recording of the late Brahms piano pieces, probably my favorite music that Brahms wrote. Like late Beethoven, there is quite a bit of room for a great interpreter. I have a later recording of these works by Kempff as well, and the differences can be pretty astounding. Just little touches here and there bring different voices to light, or make the piano resonate a little differently (which counts for quite a bit in many of these pieces where harmonies are broken apart and even smeared across the changes of bass and probably harmony). These pieces certainly share some of the tonal break down that Wagner had been experimenting with, and the tonal ambiguity at times looks ahead to Stravinsky in some ways.
The end of the 11th ‘Symphonic Etude’ by Schumann just played, and I had to back it up. The last couple of notes in the melody were some of the saddest I think I have ever heard. Not quite gasping, or resigned. It just seemed to quietly give up and almost fall apart. The dynamic Kempff plays at the end is a physical one. It sounds like he is pressing the keys so lightly that the note may not even sound. He slows down unevenly, and it is beautiful. The perfect lead into the more youthful, almost heroic beginning to the last etude.