September 17, 2009

Mozart and Bach with Clara Haskil, finding a jewel

From time to time a big discovery just happens and lightens your entire day. There where you thought that nothing else is left to be found you come across a jewel. That was my strong feeling when I stumbled upon this cd. Everything on the cd is top notch yet one of the concertos is the jewel I am talking about.The Mozart's concerto for two pianos and orchestra in E flat minor, KV 365. I heard before with Radu Lupu and Murray Perahia and that was a very rewarding recording. However the recording on this disc is on a completely different level.

First just a few words about the conductor of this concerto, as I think he is one of the most underrated conductors. I made his acquaintance through the recording of the Barber of Seville with Callas and Gobbi, and, since then, every recording I heard proved him to be a great conductor. He has a gift of injecting life in everything he plays that is most gratifying. And this is also the case here. He accompanies his soloists in perfect style, creating with his orchestra a well defined and nourishing environment for the two-fair musical play. Lively, Mozartean to the bone, with very fine detail and phrasing he leaves very little to be desired. His orchestra, the famed Philharmonia of that period, is in top shape and responds beautifully to its inspiring conductor. A very solid performance from them.

The soloists are both very distinguished interpreters of Mozart piano music, especially Clara Haskil. The Romanian pianist, already a prominent figure of the piano at the time of this recording, has a very special affinity towards Mozart's music and a extremely effective way of transmitting it through the keyboard. All her well-established qualities are manifest to the full in this recording. The phrasing, the punctuation of the melodic lines, the careful choice of tempi and the overall expression, everything makes for an authentic Mozart expression. Her musical intelligence is enveloping and transposes you in the thoughtful silence beyond the music. Geza Anda is a most competent partner. He understands this music with similar depth and manags to express it with a beautiful style and tone.

But what makes this recording really amazing is the outstanding quality of the blend between all those implicated. It is as all of the musical ideas were put into a furnace and the essence poured evenly through all the instruments. The pianos, both individually and their dialogue are so beautiful and so similar, and their musical expression is so right that listening to them creates goose-bumps. The flow of the musical ideas is so logic and so soul-bound that, at least in my mind they created a separate world where I could hardly wait for the next discovery behind a bush of roses. A wealth of musical pictures all beautifully shaped, characterized, and presented with an graceful, unobtrusive vital force behind them. A complete artistical experience indeed.

September 16, 2009

Beecham, style and elegance

Schubert is one composer that at least I took lightly in the beginning. Completely immersed in the profound musical dramaturgy of Beethoven's music and bewildered by the genial creativity of Mozart, Schubert was at the periphery of my musical interest. He didn't meet the criteria of any of the things I just discovered and understood in music.
Fortunately, with time, I came to realize what a great composer Schubert was. His music, now, is a continuous source of delight and profound excursion into the soul of man. As usual, getting the grip of ones compositions generates the search for the interpretation that brings the most out of it to ones best understanding. Unexpectedly, the search proved to be very difficult. It is very hard to manage grace, rhythm, elegance, yet undemonstrative masculinity, relentless pace yet relaxation and contemplation. And the recorded leagcy is a prove to that. However, sooner or later, one comes across the masters of Schubertian music. With a very rewarding stop at Bohm's recordings, and a nice breakaway with Carlos Kleiber (about all of them, soon on the lists), I came to Sir Thomas Beecham, said by many to be the Master of this music. And I must say that I couldn't agree more.

His recorded legacy on Schubert is present in two cd's: one coming from EMI in their Great Recordings of the Century series (comprising the 3rd, the 5th, and the 8th) and the other one from Sony (1st, 2nd, and 8th). Perfectly listenable sound on both cds and what proof of music making. Beecham manages an almost perfect blend of all the attributes mentioned above. His orchestra (Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, his own creation) responds with all their hearts and minds to Beecham demands and the result is delightful. Just listen to the unimposing elegance in the strings at the beginning of the 5th symphony and the conception and perfect execution of the orchestra is obvious. It is hard to point out certain moments as all the symphonies form uniform bodies, perfectly carved in sound. Incredible insight governs Beechams choice of tempi and phrasing. He carefully puts the accents and injects energy in the right spots managing to keep things balanced and make everything sound light but serious, smiling with confidence, coming forward with being aggressive, describing nice landscapes without becoming self indulgent or dreamy. In Beecham's

hands Schubert's music is on the verge of ethereal never falling to the ineffable. It is as real as it gets and actually it conveys an energy that moves every bit of sensible matter inside you.

So, here I stand, achubert's music is brought to light close to perfection by the nother guy saying that Beecham is great in Schubert or that great British conductor. Give it a try and have his take on this wonderful, youthful musical masterpieces. You won't be dissappointed. Maybe you look for something slightly different in this music but nevertheless Beecham will bring so much that it will be so worthwhile.

September 11, 2009

Klipschorn, an audio nirvana

When one listens to music as a consuming hobby then, sooner or later, one comes to search for the audio equipment that brings music to life to the best of his auditive apparatus knowledge. My search started a good decade ago and since I had the chance to run over and to listen to some exquisite music machines. The last great encounter happened last week, when I had the chance to audition the famed design of Paul Klipsch, the Klipschorns and Belle. And what a setup that was as their owner, Kerry, had not two but four Klipschorns serving as fronts and backs and Belle, serving a center channel. A huge surround setup, will you agree, and a even huger satisfaction source for my thirsty musical brain.

For a guy with such great taste in speakers you would expect a great musical program and that's exactly what we got. We listened to Tchaikovsky's Marche Slave with the Kiev Philharmonic, to Dave Brubeck Quartet and its Take Five, to concert performances from Cream and Nirvana. First thing first. The Klipschorns provide an unique musical experience. Their effortless rendition of every instrumental nuance on a huge and precise sonorous soundstage is the first thing that strikes you. No meter how big the Kiev orchestra got the speakers just poured the music into the room. Hearing them was like seeing Pavarotti sing. They conveyed every nuance of the very rhythmic piece with tight and generous dynamics. That was the second thing that struck me and it adds to the sense of ease these big speakers breathe. I heard the air in between the instruments, I heard every instrument alive and natural with every nuance the soloists gave them making everything a very emotionally involving experience.

With Dave Brubeck enormously famous Take five the speakers showed another one of their multiple beautiful virtues. The sax was enveloping. I never heard this instrument like that from a speaker. The reproduction was so complete that you actually could hear all the microscopic inflections put in the instrument. You could feel the soul of the man coming out through his instrument. Again an experience so involving and so wonderfully close to what listening to music should be.

From the rest I will only mention the Cream dvd. We listened to the impressive drums solo of Ginger Baker. It was yet another big discovery and jaw-dropping Klipschorn performance. Every drum was perfectly defined, in timber and amplitude. No matter how many beats per second Baker managed to pull off the Klipschs just enetered the soul of the artist and the bone marrow of the instrument and created everything with amazing detail and dynamics. It was a very impressive display of power and utmost control of low frequencies amidst the other qualities displayed already.

All in all a huge musical and audiophile experience. I still thank Kerry in my mind a week later for the great occasion he offered us. The Klipschorns are everything you read about and a lot more. Is getting to the core of the music and to the soul of the artists what makes listening to music through these speakers an experience apart. I sure hope next time I'm in Houston I will get the chance of another meeting with the outstanding design of Paul Klipsch.