Thanks for the link, but I have to disagree. I thought his playing was more thoughtless than thoughtful. Too many sudden accelerations, uncalled for sforzandos, out of control rubato in places that just don't need rubato... Most of his playing made little sense to me. I also felt that he played the easy parts too fast and the hard parts too slow- not impressive. I didn't think he would ever finish the A flat Ballade. That was difficult to listen to.
I didn't listen to the F minor Ballade, but 14 minutes?? What did he take a smoke break in the middle?
OK, can I start a flame war?
We live in a time of incredibly virtuosic, incredibly unimaginative performance. The whole classical music world is hopelessly wrapped around the axle with this idea that it's important to play a piece
right -- conservatories train it, critics enforce it. Professionals making recordings first make sure that there's nothing to criticize: I've heard famous pianists give very daring and eccentric performances in live concerts, but then record very middle-of-the-road interpretations of the same pieces. Perfectionism is in; risk-taking is out. Contemporary classical pianists, incredibly capable though they are, are overwhelmingly clinical, dull, and self-similar.
And we've become accustomed to this. When we hear somebody really taking risks, interpreting music in a way that's personal and honest, without fear of going outside the narrow bounds of this ingrown little music culture we have, it's positively jarring.
I love Don Betts's recordings. Why? They're bold, intensely personal, and unafraid to take risks. He plays them with complete honesty -- these interpretations are his own, not what he thinks will please others -- and nobody else on earth would play these pieces quite this way. I've heard a zillion recordings of the Chopin ballades, played one, read through all -- and I thought I already knew them. Now I've been jolted out of complacent familiarity. I guess that's an unpleasant experience for some; I find it energizing.
Personal favorites among these recordings: first ballade (love it!), the etude WoO (the voicings!), the Op 62 nocturne (thought this piece was a throwaway until I heard him play it).
With that said, maybe he's seen his better days (he's apparently no spring chicken) so I probably shouldn't be too critical.
Dude, agism is not cool. Can it.
Seriously.