Andras Schiff is interesting for Mozart.
I am, of course, a huge fan of Glenn Gould, but I think his recordings of the complete Mozart sonatas are farcical at best and abysmal at worst. Does anyone else agree?
I agree, but that doesn't count really... I was a huge fan of gould years ago, but now, even his Bach provokes me. I find it superficial, experimental just for the sake of it. But hopefully I will come back to gould with new, fresh ears later in my life, who knows. I just find the "worship" of Gould-the-Bach-god unhealthy. And health is everything...!
That's fascinating. Can you explain why you feel worship of Gould can be unhealthy and what made you turn away from him?
I stopped listening to his recordings when I started my academic studies, probably due to "over-listening". Then, I started to notice his "impact" on my fellow students. They wanted to play like gould, you know, with his typical dryness, separated notes, and extreme rythmical precision. When they (and I) tried to imitate him, we missed the most essential part, the singing. When gould himself plays, it's like all of the voices have their own line of phrase. But, when people imitate his "style" they focus on the external matters, as mentioned. And, if you're really into getting the multiple voices to sing, his recipe is the least effective, it's counter-effective in fact. Because he was a genius and a freak , the laws of nature didn't have any impact on him. He could make a four part fugue sing and dance, even if he played every note staccatissimo and used an extremely slow or fast tempo. It's fascinating to listen to, but devastating to follow.In my opinion.BennoM
Gould recorded the Mozart Sonatas for the exact purpose to show how bad they are (this is the reason Gould gave for recording them).
i can't find it now, but i read on one of these replie's that someone said that mozart is for the most part happy. i can't really pull that off, it's completely opposite of my personality and i think this is the big problem that i'm having. anyone have an answer for this?
If you can come to enjoy the softer bits, the intense parts will seem that much more intense by contrast.
I believe this to work vice versa as well, the best example I can typically think of is Rachmaninoff's Third Concerto. Focusing greatly on the first movement before the Climax, makes the finale extremely thrilling, and makes me tense and everything! It that's climatic O_o But the second movement is very welcoming, which has an absolutely beautiful melody, very calm... and totaly works as an "aftermath" if you like.