Sviatoslav Richter, Mozart Sonatas / Chopin Etudes (released June 24, 2008) Medici Arts Classic Archive EDV 1333 3085208 Online scores: K. 282 | K. 545 | K. 310 Chopin First Editions |
This concert was given only a few years before Richter was forced to stop playing in public, but the precision and suppleness of touch are remarkable. In the last decade or so of his career, he learned new scores voraciously, including many of the Mozart sonatas. For this recital he played three of them, KK. 282, 545, and 310, with all of the repeats. Although there is lace-like finesse in the filigree passages, there is nothing precious about the approach. There are a few finger slips here and there, nothing that takes away from the beauty and considered judgment of the playing. Sometimes, he makes you wonder about what Mozart meant by some markings, like the forte vs. piano contrasts in the first movement of K. 282, which Richter ignores (although he observes those in the minuets). For the last week or so, I have been practicing the A minor sonata, K. 310, which has become the latest obsession of Master Ionarts. When I tire of playing the first movement, which is what he asks to hear over and over, he can watch Richter.
The rest of the recital was given to a set of Chopin etudes, selected from opp. 10 and 25. Two things are striking about his playing here and in the Mozart: how rhythmically driven it is and the incredible economy of motion. The Chopin is naturally more free, with impetuous rubato, and rarely have they struck my ear more as pieces of music than as insidious technical challenges (although there are flaws here and there, even for Richter). Bonus tracks include earlier versions of op. 10, nos. 4 and 12, from a BBC broadcast in 1969 (both earlier recordings are significantly shorter and faster), as well as Rachmaninoff's Etude-Tableau, op. 39, no. 3, in F# minor.
90'
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