Martha Argerich - Live from the Concertgebouw, 1978 & 1992 (2000)

  • 05 Feb, 19:29
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Live from the Concertgebouw, 1978 & 1992
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: EMI Classics
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:04:48
Total Size: 312 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

Mozart's - Piano Concerto No. 25 In C, K. 5031
1. I. Allegro maestoso
2. II. Andante
3. III. Allegretto

Beethoven - Piano Concerto No. 1 In C, Op. 15
4. I. Allegro con brio
5. II. Largo
6. II. Allegro scherzando

Performers:
Martha Argerich, piano

The relationship between pianist Martha Argerich and the recording studio has always been an on/off affair. Consequently, many of her discs derive from live concert tapings. EMI is doing a great service to the pianist's legion of fans by issuing excellent-sounding live broadcast recordings, like the two concertos contained on this disc. Mozart's C Major Concerto K. 503 is new to Argerich's discography. Her skittish fluidity in the passagework of the outer movements downplays the music's operatic overtones, stressing instead the music's big-boned virtuosic parameters. Occasional patchy tone and unsettled entrances are a small price to pay for Szymon Goldberg's sensitive, well-balanced support at the helm of the Netherlands Chamber Orchestra. Why are the cadenzas unaccredited (Mozart left none for this work)? Argerich made a studio recording of Beethoven's joyfully brash First Concerto with the Philharmonia Orchestra under Giuseppe Sinopoli for DG in the late 1980s. This 1992 live version, however, finds the mercurial virtuoso in more spontaneous, rabble-rousing fettle. At the same time, she conveys more breadth and breathing room in the slow movement. Heinz Wallberg and the Concertgebouw Orchestra turn in an alert, yet firmly rooted orchestral framework that supports the soloist without indulging her headstrong tendencies. One might expect a pianist of Argerich's capabilities to let rip in Beethoven's longer, wilder, first-movement cadenza, but she opts instead for the more frequently played shorter one. -- Jed Distler