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Rubinstein Collection, Vol. 47 - Chopin Waltzes and Impromptus [Import]

Arthur Rubinstein , Frederic Chopin Audio CD
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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1. "Waltzes, Op. 34"
2. "Waltzes, Op. 64"
3. "Waltzes, Op. 69"
4. "Waltzes, Op. 70"
5. "Waltz No. 1, Op. 18, Grande valse brillante, in E-flat"
6. "No. 1, Valse brillante, in A-flat"
7. "No. 2, Valse brillante, in A Minor"
8. "No. 3, Valse brillante, in F"
9. "Waltz No. 5, Op. 42, Two-four, in E-flat"
10. "No. 1, Minute, in D-flat"
11. No. 2 in C-sharp Minor
12. No. 3 in A-flat
13. "No. 1, L'Adieu, in A-flat"
14. No. 2 in B Minor
15. No. 1 in G-Flat
16. No. 2 in F Minor
17. No. 3 in D-Flat
18. "Waltz No. 14, Op. posth. in E Minor"
19. "Impromptu No. 1, Op. 29 in A-flat"
20. "Impromptu No. 2, Op. 36 in F-sharp"
See all 23 tracks on this disc

Product Description

Amazon.ca

Disparu en 1982, Arthur Rubinstein reste pour beaucoup d'entre nous intimement lié à l'univers de Frédéric Chopin. Curieuse association entre un artiste qui revendiquait sa joie de vivre et son bonheur quotidien et le compositeur, symbole de la souffrance humaine et des drames passionnels. C'est plus particulièrement la technique sans faille et la légèreté du toucher de ce formidable pianiste qui font merveille dans ces Valses. Pour la petite histoire, il est intéressant de savoir qu'Arthur Rubinstein a enregistré ces Valses et Impromptus en une seule séance de studio, jusqu'au beau milieu de la nuit. Arthur Rubinstein donne à chacune d'elle une personnalité, un ton qui font de ce récital un régal de variété dans la continuité. Le phrasé aérien d'Arthur Rubinstein permet une lisibilité sans faille de ces bijoux à la joie de vivre communicative. Dans les Impromptus, tout l'art d'Arthur Rubinstein consiste à donner une légèreté toute maîtrisée du toucher, qui n'appartient qu'à lui. Un album témoignage d'un grand monsieur du piano, hédoniste malgré tout... -- Jeanne Semprin

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
Artur Rubinstein great recording of Chopin's Bolero and 14 Waltzes
By Peter Dietrich, president, Chopin Society of New England

Artur Rubinstein's performance of the fourteen waltzes seems to be among the definitive versions. This stereo recording from a one day session in June of 1963, issued on BMG in the Rubinstein collection volume 47, and the earlier version first issued on LP RCA Victor LM-1892 recorded in December, 1953 and issued on BMG Rubinstein collection volume 29, equals in sound and profound understanding the two great versions by Alexander Brailowsky (1896-1976) recorded in the early fifties on LP for RCA Victor LM-1082 as well as the stereo recording from the early sixties issued on Sony Music SBK 46346 in 1990.

The four recordings are milestones of the classical waltzes. Their interpretations have achieved expert fluidity with grace and elegance of nobility. As Robert Schumann remarked "should be danced at least by countesses." To the above recordings I will add Dinu Lipatti's recording issued by EMI in the Great Recordings of the Century series. My opinion is based on hearing a great number of outstanding as well as good performances through more than fifty years. I will just list several additional names from my collection who have recorded fourteen waltzes: 1) Robert Lortat (1930), 2) Alfred Cortot (1934 and 1943), 3) Edward Kilenyi (1952), 4) Moura Lympany (1959), 5) Witold Malcuzynski (1959), 6) Regina Smendzianka (1959 and 1961), 7) Samson Francois (1964), 8) Stefan Askenase (1964), 9) Adam Harasiewicz (1965), 10) Tamas Vassary (1966); pianists who have recorded nineteen waltzes: 1) Augustin Anievas (1970), 2) Geoges Cziffra (1979), 3) Claudio Arrau (1980 - several of the waltzes are played too slow), 4) Vladimir Ashkenazy (1984), 5) Lidia Grychtolowna (1989), 6) Istvan Szekely (1992), 7) Garrick Ohlsson (1996 - 20 waltzes in this recording) 8) Jerzy Sterczynski (1996 - 23 waltzes, which will be discussed in the future).

The famous Polish poet Kazimierz Wierzynski author of the "Life and Death of Chopin" (1949) makes the following observation. "Chopin's Waltzes have little or nothing in common with the atmosphere of the ballroom. Niecks calls them Tanzdichtungen (dance poems). How does Rubinstein play the Chopin Waltzes? Surely, their worldliness and elegance are particularly suited to this worldly and elegant pianist whose incomparable virtuosity goes hand in hand with his unique feeling for Chopin. Without in the least sentimentalizing Chopin, Rubinstein fully renders his warmth: he is the ideal interpreter of the waltzes in which tenderness is so subtly blended with sparkle, playfulness and deep emotion."

Other Chopin works included in this compilation are the four impromptus recorded in 1964 and the Bolero recorded in 1962. Harvey Sachs, author of Rubinstein's biography published by Grove Press, New York, 1995, wrote the following notes for this compilation: "The 1964 version of the Impromptus, heard here is typical of the beautifully poised, yet deeply poetic Chopin recordings that Rubinstein made in his seventies as a sort of summa of his interpretations of the music of his great compatriot." However, the glory of this compilation is the Bolero in A Major, Op. 19. Until the Rubinstein recording in 1962 when he was almost 75 years old, this work was "obscure" Chopin, almost completely forgotten and recorded very seldom as well as terribly underrated. Despite the obscurity of the work for such a long time, there are several recordings of it in existence. I will list the notable recordings from my collection according to their release:
1) Adam Harasiewicz, Philips (1972); 2) Arnaldo Cohen, Dischi Ricordi, LP (1978); 3) Nikita Magaloff, Philips (1979); 4) Vladimir Ashkenazy, London/Decca (1987); 5) Georges Cziffra, EMI (1987); 6) Nelly Ben-Or, Meridian Records (1989); 7) Idil Biret, Naxos (1993); 8) Garrick Ohlsson, Arabesque, vol. 8 (1997); 9) Emil von Saur (recorded 1940) Arbiter (1998); 10) Anatol Ugorski, Chopin Complete Edition DG, vol. 7 (1999).

All the above recordings, although inspired performances and technically excellent, do not reveal the hidden beauty of the dance, as does Artur Rubinstein in his performance. Mr. Rubinstein unhurried tempos and magical play with the pedal plus his affinity for Spanish music brings this work to interpretative splendid heights unknown until his recording and since. These five star performances are highly recommended for every music lover.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Great Chopin Master July 25 2003
By A Customer
Format:Audio CD
This CD is superb. It shows the best of Rubinstein's Chopin.He did this CD with so much clearness and feeling. Rubinstein ends the CD with the little known Bolero. I reccomend it a lot.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Chopin from Rubinstein Mar 7 2001
Format:Audio CD
This stereo version of the Waltzes was recorded over the course of a single night in 1963, at RCA's Italiana Studios in Rome. For those accustomed to thinking of Arthur Rubinstein as a "Romantic" pianist, this edition of the Chopin Waltzes will come as a shock. The pianist plays the Waltzes straight, with very little rubato and at moderate tempos. This is in marked contrast to his 1953 mono set, which was markedly freer in tempo and phrasing. Which was is the "right" way? Comparing both recordings demonstrates that there are many equzlly valid ways to interpret this music.

Rubinstein recorded the Impromptus several times over the course of his long career--this is his only complete version in stereo. He plays the posthumously published Fantasie-Impromptu (which Chopin, ironically, wanted destroyed after his death) from a previously unknown manuscript, which differs in numerous details from more well known versions.

The Bolero, one of Chopin's least known works, is an effective encore.

The sound is immediate without sacrificing warmth. Highly recommended.

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