Piano Forum

Topic: Simone Dinnerstein  (Read 1475 times)

Offline steve_m

  • PS Silver Member
  • Full Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 158

Offline minor9th

  • PS Silver Member
  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 686
Re: Simone Dinnerstein
Reply #1 on: September 18, 2007, 02:09:08 AM
I just bought her Goldberg Variations on Telarc, which I like very much. She plays several of the variations a lot slower and in a more romantic vein than most, but at least she imparts a little personality. I've only listened to it once...perhaps further listening will change my mind. Without question, though, the audio quality is superb.

Offline ramseytheii

  • PS Silver Member
  • Sr. Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2488
Re: Simone Dinnerstein
Reply #2 on: September 18, 2007, 02:12:14 AM
I also liked her performance of some of the variations, for the very reason that they aren't so breakneck and mechanical like people play them these days (COUGH COUGH MARTIN STADTFELD COUGH COUGH). 

We are so used to comparing everything with the Glenn Gould - and she brings that up in her interview - that it is easy to forget this is a piece that has inspired a lot of idiosyncratic recordings.  Gould's is probably at once the strangest and the most communicative, and also his life situation added a lot of mystique to those two studio performances, but I also recommend the recording by Tatiana Nikolaeva, the dedicatee of Shostakovich's preludes & fugues, who gives the Goldbergs a really beautiful, Romantic, idiosyncratic interpretation.  There are echoes of the Nikolaeva in the Donnersteine, though I don't know if she ever heard Nikolaeva's recording.

Walter Ramsey



 

Logo light pianostreet.com - the website for classical pianists, piano teachers, students and piano music enthusiasts.

Subscribe for unlimited access

Sign up

Follow us

Piano Street Digicert