bitus
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What are some good recordings of Rachmaninoff preludes? I have a John Browning recording, but i don't really like it that much. The Bitus
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Be still, my soul: thy God doth undertake To guide the future, as He has the past.
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View sheet music for: Preludes by Rachmaninoff
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allchopin
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I have a John Browning recording, but i don't really like it that much.
 Horowitz has some quality ones.
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A modern house without a flush toilet... uncanny.
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rohansahai
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Richter recorded them (not all, but still better than most).
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Waste of time -- do not read signatures.
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chopiabin
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Ashkenazy's are pretty good, Horowitz's are amazing, and there are recordings of Rachmaninov playing some of them himself which are incredible.
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bitus
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Thank you... i'm going to look into those recordings. If i had money, i would buy the Rachmaninoff recordings of himself... but as i just doubled the amount of money I have by finding a quarter on the ground... i just have to keep wishing  The Bitus.
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Be still, my soul: thy God doth undertake To guide the future, as He has the past.
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zhiliang
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Ok i find the Dmitri Alexeev good one to try if you already own the Ashkenazy, Rachmaninoff or Richter (not whole set of preludes). It is on Virgin and its quite a bargain containing also Morceaux de fantaisies, Oriental Sketch for Piano, Mélodie no 3. Or maybe Ruth Laredo on the preludes too.
Zhiliang
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-- arthur rubinstein --
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dj
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Thank you... i'm going to look into those recordings. If i had money, i would buy the Rachmaninoff recordings of himself... but as i just doubled the amount of money I have by finding a quarter on the ground... i just have to keep wishing  The Bitus. well im not sure exactly how many recordings you were expecting people to recommend for $0.50  but you could try the library maybe 
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rach on!
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MikeLauwrie
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Howard Shelley is the best for the preludes, by a long shot. Don't get his Rach 3 though.
Peter Katin is Ok as well.
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nolan
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Sorry for reviving a dead topic, but I didn't really want to start a new one... Naxos has just released a new recording of the Rachmaninoff Preludes played by Eldar Nebolsin. I have been listening through my favorites and I think the interpretations are really good. Give it a listen if you are interested: http://naxos.com/catalogue/item.asp?item_code=8.570327
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pianodude90
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You should try Boris Berezovsky's complete recording of his preludes. That's amazing!
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jabbz
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(the last post was nearly a year ago).
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ryanyee
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i'd recommend gilels' recordings.
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frigo
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i'd recommend gilels' recordings.
I agree with you, he's amazing
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dnephi
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Lugansky's set is absolutely stunning. Highly recommended.
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For us musicians, the music of Beethoven is the pillar of fire and cloud of mist which guided the Israelites through the desert. (Roughly quoted, Franz Liszt.)
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s_bussotti
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Lugansky's set is absolutely stunning. Highly recommended.
Seconded, although to listen to it as a whole set can be a bit.... heavy. Believe it or not, Biret's Naxos album isn't half-bad, if not a bit too straight-forward.
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retrouvailles
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Go with Howard Shelley, who is pretty much a Rachmaninoff expert (having been the first to record all of his piano music).
Btw, this topic is really old. No point in continuing really.
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rachfan
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Years ago on an FM broadcast I heard a CD of the now late Constance Keene playing the Op. 23 Preludes. I was amazed by the wonderful technique and lyricism she brought to that set. I believe the CD is no longer available, unfortunately. I do have the Ashkenazy CDs which are excellent, as well as the CDs of Rachmaninoff himself playing selected preludes, both mentioned earlier in this thread.
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88melter
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The Richter ones I have just heard recently, on a collection disc, are really powerful, crisp, and subtle, all at the same time. What a musician he was! Benno Moisevitch has a great one of the Bminor on Art of Piano CD/DVD. Avoid Ashkenazy, he has such a brittle FFF that it'l break your ears or stereo. 88melter
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general disarray
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I know this is unfashionable, but Idil Biret, an under-appreciated artist, has recorded some wonderful Rachmaninov on Naxos. Her Preludes and Etudes-tableaux are first class. Plus, they're cheap.
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rob_the_dude
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Simon Trpčeski did good recordings if your looking for a new CD. He didn't do all of Op. 32 and Op.23 though 
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