Ludwig van Beethoven - Violin Sonatas 6-8 - Gidon Kremer & Martha Argerich AUDIOPHILE
Ludwig van Beethoven - Violin Sonatas 6-8 - Gidon Kremer & Martha Argerich AUDIOPHILE
Ludwig van Beethoven - Violin Sonatas 6-8 - Gidon Kremer & Martha Argerich AUDIOPHILE
Ludwig van Beethoven - Violin Sonatas 6-8 - Gidon Kremer & Martha Argerich AUDIOPHILE

Ludwig van Beethoven - Violin Sonatas 6-8 - Gidon Kremer & Martha Argerich (2LP 3 Sides, Digital Recording)

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Ludwig van Beethoven - Sonatas for piano and violin Nos. 6–8

Violin - Gidon Kremer  

Piano - Martha Argerich

 

2LP, standard sleeve

Original analog Master tape : NO (Digital Recording Original Master Tape)

Heavy Press : 180g Virgin Vinyl

Record color : Black

Speed : 33RPM

Size : 12'’

Stereo

Studio

Record Press : Optimal Media GmbH in Germany

Label : Analogphonic

Original label : Deutsche Grammophon

Original Label : Deutsche Grammophon

Recorded in Montreux, Auditorium Stravinski, December 1993

Engineered by Gregor Zielinsky

Produced by Wolfgang Stengel

Mastered by Rainer Maillard at Emil Berliner Studios

Photography by Klaus Rudolph

Originally released in November 1994    

Reissued in 2014

 

Tracks :

Side A:  SONATE A-DUR, OP.30 NR.1:

1. Allegro

2. Adagio molto espressivo

3. Allegretto con Variazioni (I—VI)

Side B: - SONATE C-MOLL, OP. 30 NR. 2:

1. Allegro con brio

2. Adagio cantabile

3. Scherzo. Allegro

4. Finale. Allegro — Presto

Side C:

1. Allegro assai

2. Tempo di Minuetto, ma molto moderato e grazioso

3. Allegro vivace

 

Reviews:

"Beethoven’s ten violin sonatas span the period from 1797-1812, and the G major work ending the series (which he evidently revised prior to its publication in 1816) came as long after the Kreutzer as the difference in opus numbers suggests – the nine intervening years saw the appearance of Symphonies Nos. 4-8 and much else. Stylistically, this last sonata looks forward to his third period and its lyricism differs markedly from the fire of its predecessor, while the other eight are youthfully confident; it is perhaps significant that only two of the whole series are in a minor key.

Kremer and Argerich understand the bright buoyancy of the Op. 12 triptych, in which the music flows along crisply yet flexibly, with brisk tempos and sharply defined dynamics: there is charm here as well as the necessary energy. I confess to longstanding slight reservations about this violinist’s sweet yet wiry tone and the way he sometimes shapes and shades a phrase; but make no mistake, he is totally assured and his partnership with the equally authoritative Argerich offers much to admire and enjoy. The finale of the First Sonata, a dancing rondo in 6/8, shows their boldness and bounce to advantage – and the same is true of the witty first movement of No. 2, in the same metre but more teasing in character. Slow movements, sometimes in variation form, also characteristically speak with elegance and eloquence while scherzos have point and vitality. This latter characteristic also marks the Presto first movement of the A minor Sonata, No. 4, unusually vigorous here, with Argerich in tigerish mood. Though this duo mostly know when to persuade and relax, with such strong players the interpretative temperature is inevitably on the high side.

However, I’ll pen a cautionary word about the extremely free delivery of the opening bars of the Spring Sonata (No. 5). Indeed, with the duo’s performance of this piece self-conscious romanticism suddenly and disconcertingly rears its head and the central Adagio molto espressivo tends to be self-indulgent. The opening Allegro of No. 6 is deliberate in pace and didactic in manner, though it holds the attention, and the Adagio that follows saunters along at four quaver beats to the bar where Beethoven asks for two crotchets and thus a greater sense of flow. The vivid first movement of No. 8 in G major, though exhilarating, could be more playful, but its quirky, overlong Minuet moves well enough. In its predecessor, the duo give us the right minor mode force and drama, and these qualities also inform the Kreutzer, which receives a performance of great authority even if one looks for more simplicity in the central set of variations. The final G major Sonata is all of a piece with the rest of this set and perhaps admirable on its own terms, but I like it to flow more naturally and gracefully, and in the Scherzo the artists treat the sforzando-piano markings as heavy accents.

For performances of gentler and richer humanity, though not wanting in brilliance, I prefer Perlman and Ashkenazy, finely recorded in the 1970s, but note that, while at mid price, they take four discs instead of the three the present duo achieve by altering the order of the sonatas. Clear recording, though at forte and above the piano is on the reverberant side." Gramophone

 

Ratings:

Discogs : 3.88 / 5

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