for the piano #3: Debussy vs. Ravel vs. Satie

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed

We already know how this one ends, but propriety dictates that we make a show of it

Poll Results

OptionVotes
Debussy 22
Satie 18
Ravel 9


five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:22 (fourteen years ago)

don't count Satie as on the level of the other two, so for me it's between Gaspard de la nuit and Tombeau de Couperin or Estampes and the piano Images. I'll have to go with Ravel.

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:27 (fourteen years ago)

Gotta go for Debussy here. Even though I prefer the orchestrated version of "Clair De Lune" (ironically done by Ravel), it was a piano piece after all. And what a beautiful one at that!

You're Twistin' My Melody Man! (Geir Hongro), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:28 (fourteen years ago)

debussy by a far larger margin than liszt or chopin in the others

etudes, preludes II, preludes I, estampes, suite bergamesque, images

even debussy's piano juvenilia is pretty great

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:31 (fourteen years ago)

Debussy ahead of Ravel (Ravel wins as master orchestrator but that's not what we're talking about here). Satie is nice enough but does not belong on the same page as the other two, nowhere near.

Matt DC, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:32 (fourteen years ago)

this record might contract that margin for you some, it blew my mind

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41EKG8HHJ1L._SL500_AA300_.jpg

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:33 (fourteen years ago)

The winner of this poll has to go up against Iron Maiden.

Mark G, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:34 (fourteen years ago)

corey you don't rate Debussy's Preludes?

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:47 (fourteen years ago)

agree that Gaspard is 50th-level mage stuff

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:48 (fourteen years ago)

argerich's gaspard is awesome

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:49 (fourteen years ago)

xp I haven't heard them yet u_u

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:50 (fourteen years ago)

may I recommend mitsuko uchida's version

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:51 (fourteen years ago)

sorry that's the etudes

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:52 (fourteen years ago)

love the etudes!

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:55 (fourteen years ago)

sandor kocsis is excellent in debussy tho ymmv

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 15:55 (fourteen years ago)

I am more fond of Satie in the long run but since we're talking piano, I have to go with Debussy.

Le mépris vient de la tête, la haine vient du cœur (Michael White), Thursday, 3 March 2011 16:09 (fourteen years ago)

Broke my long absence to vote for Ravel, who is untouchable.

it also takes hip-hip with it (Eric H.), Thursday, 3 March 2011 17:14 (fourteen years ago)

the main thing standing between me & a Ravel vote is that I was ignorant of his piano music until last year. had just plain missed it. but it's phenomenal. Debussy I have known about for ages.

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 17:20 (fourteen years ago)

Satie was my entry point to classical music in 1991 when I read Roger Shattuck's amazing The Banquet Years (kind of a 4-way bio of Satie, Jarry, Apollinaire and H. Rousseau). But then Satie led to Debussy and my mind exploded.

Since I rate the Preludes Book I and II as pretty much the best music ever created ever, my vote for D is I guess inevitable.

But Ravel is TREMENDOUS and I don't mean to diminish his power at all. One thing D and R have in common is that every little bit of their music in every genre they touched is worth hearing and rehearing. Also the aesthetic legacy of these two is still very much an alive and electric thing.

Satie-- def the most fun to READ about!

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 18:50 (fourteen years ago)

My vote goes to the author of the original oblique strategies: Erik Satie's Performance Indications

Milton Parker, Thursday, 3 March 2011 18:57 (fourteen years ago)

^^^ My point exactly! Like Eno, Satie is an awesome spirit guide, but, also like Eno, the music kind of wore off for me.

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:14 (fourteen years ago)

wait I thought JL and MP were the same person? o_O

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:18 (fourteen years ago)

ravel

ciderpress, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:20 (fourteen years ago)

We have almost the same given name. This has caused confusion before!

MP = west coast, an actual musician with accomplishments
JL = east coast, an insignificant musician with modest cartooning accomplishments

I think we are probz about the same age too.

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:30 (fourteen years ago)

Doppelgänger!

I think nakh is my overseas counterpart, though I wonder if he would agree :)

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:38 (fourteen years ago)

hmmn not sure

you seem pretty immersed in 20th c classical and ~idm~

they are favourites of mine too, tho in general my listening habits are more scattershot and noisy / rockish (see the geir hongo listening club)

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:43 (fourteen years ago)

if you have the concentration to really explore a certain area, i think that whole chromatic period between wagner and schoenberg, including d, r & s but also scriabin, szymanowski, zemlinsky et al would be a worthwhile subject....i think maybe you are doing that already?

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:45 (fourteen years ago)

I am! I tried posting a little thing about it on the general CM thread about three times before I gave up (was using my rm's comp which crashes when you use this wireless receiver thing). A recent find in this vein is Franz Schreker's Chamber Symphony — luxuriously orchestrated and a feeling for harmony that is subtly unique. I'd recommend it.

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:53 (fourteen years ago)

I also have a bunch of Zemlinsky downloaded, need to delve into those.

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:54 (fourteen years ago)

nakhchivan have you heard the new Michael Hersch? fucking spectacular imo

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:55 (fourteen years ago)

i love these threads

ℳℴℯ ❤\(◕‿◕✿ (Princess TamTam), Thursday, 3 March 2011 20:00 (fourteen years ago)

I like them all. Satie for "Trois Gymnopedies," one of my favourite pieces of music ever, but I also love Ravel's "Pavane pour une infante défunte" and some little Debussy piece I have on a promotional CD given out years ago by W.H. Smith when we still had them in Canada. Maybe someone can answer a question I posed a few days ago (I'm an amateur when it comes to this stuff): is "Trois Gymnopedies" classified as classical or 20th-century? It was written in 1888, and I don't how literal the term "20-century" is supposed to be.

clemenza, Thursday, 3 March 2011 20:19 (fourteen years ago)

Like Eno, Satie is an awesome spirit guide, but, also like Eno, the music kind of wore off for me.

I thought they'd both faded more me as well but every once in a while I rediscover Thursday Afternoon and it's like the first time all over again.

Satie was my entrance point to earlier classical as well, as he is for many people because he's just so modern (he often gets classified as 20th century despite most of his hits technically being 19th, but he's no romantic). It took an extra decade for me to wake up to Ravel and perhaps I'm still waking up to Debussy, but I've definitely responded more to the Preludes & the Etudes more than almost all the orchestral works.

There's that great exchange, I forget whether it's reprinted in 'Silence' or 'A Year From Monday', where Cage the young new-music critic and another critic were tussling over Satie in the 40's, Cage arguing in favor of Satie as the most forward-thinking & important, the other critic saying 'well he's been dead for 20+ years and he still isn't being prgorammed any more often in concerts, so just face it, the audience is never showing up for this guy', and Cage just making a quiet response that his time will come. And the concert hall was in fact never the appropriate venue for furniture music, but the second those Ciccolini LPs showed up and it finally had a chance to be heard in the right context, Satie found his audience. All this just underlines how the audiences for him and these other two composers don't quite completely intersect.

ps thanks for calling me 'actual' JL! helps to read that every once in a while in my cubicle here

Milton Parker, Thursday, 3 March 2011 20:45 (fourteen years ago)

Is #4 going to be Jerry Lee Lewis vs. Fats Domino vs. Little Richard? I want to get a head start on some relistening.

clemenza, Thursday, 3 March 2011 21:28 (fourteen years ago)

nah, Bartók vs. Schoenberg vs. Scriabin 8)

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 21:52 (fourteen years ago)

Well, Schoenberg doesn't have a huge volume of solo pcs though, despite their significance.

I'd say Bartok v Scriabin v Prokofiev myself. Prok's large solo piano ouevre is very very underrated outside of a couple of sonatas...

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 21:56 (fourteen years ago)

Schoenberg doesn't have much piano music, you're right (the Op. 25 suite has been in my head lately, so I'm biased) — Prokofiev does makes more sense, but I've only heard his symphonies so far.

corey, Thursday, 3 March 2011 21:59 (fourteen years ago)

Try Frederic Chiu in Prok's sonatas, he brings out the kinship with Debussy and Schumann more than yr demon-banger type pianists. Harmonia Mundi has collected them into a big cheap box. Also Prok's 3rd and 6th syms are AMAZING...

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:09 (fourteen years ago)

nakhchivan have you heard the new Michael Hersch? fucking spectacular imo

― five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 19:55 (2 hours ago)

no, nor had i heard of him, which recording do you refer to?

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/f/f9/Michael_Hersch_-_Orchestral_Works_-_Marin_Alsop_-_Album_Cover.jpg

he gets the same 'no adumbration needed' packaging as charles ives! pretty august for a 39 year old

nakhchivan, Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:10 (fourteen years ago)

This one. It is extremely modern, like the sort of stuff you'd keep away from people whose take on modern classical is gonna be "lotta racket." It's not busy-noisy, but it is challenging/abstract/"out." And, for me, breathtaking. Mandatory disclosure, I've worked with Cuckson and consider her one of the most exciting players working, she has incredible taste and vision. But that aside this is a truly breathtaking piece of music in my opinion

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:17 (fourteen years ago)

a couple of weeks ago I couldn't sleep and I listened to The Wreckage of Flowers on headphones in the dark, close hard listening w/o any internet/visual distractions, and it was really like traveling into the depths of space - or seeing glaciers form - or something like that: this feeling of a thing that didn't exist before being built with sound. but with simple sound: brief two- and three-note phrases, one instrument alone most of the time playing on one or two strings, and rests in between the phrases. not "minimalist," but taking cues from minimalism; emotional but not romantic; an incredible piece of music

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:25 (fourteen years ago)

I would pick Debussy here, though to be honest, I love almost everything Ravel wrote for piano. As technical piano music, he's almost unsurpassed, and the compositions are generally ridiculously beautiful to boot. But Debussy's music just opened up a whole pandora's box, while Ravel was refining what poured out. Also, Debussy is at his least precious and "impressionist" in his piano music (the etudes in particular), and also his funniest (his homage to Haydn totally doesn't sound like Haydn to me, and in fact sounds like someone playing a modern jazz ballad in 1910). I have almost exactly the same opinion re: the Debussy and Ravel string quartets.

Satie I like, but his music has yet to really grab me by the heart. I find him pleasant, and also clever, but not really the gripping for some reason.

Dominique, Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:32 (fourteen years ago)

and also, see Ligeti's piano music for modern takes on these three composers' piano styles

Dominique, Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:33 (fourteen years ago)

and it was really like traveling into the depths of space - or seeing glaciers form - or something like that: this feeling of a thing that didn't exist before being built with sound.

I think of this as 'the Sibelius thing' and I seek it out wherever it is reported. What label, aero? (ie can i get it off eMusic)

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:39 (fourteen years ago)

Whoah I just looked him up on the Fanfare review database and his 140 minute piano cycle The Vanishing Pavilions sounds amazing!

The generating seed for The Vanishing Pavilions was the poetry of Christopher Middleton (b. 1926), and the booklet notes suggest that Hersch’s piece be considered “a shattered song cycle without words.” There are some 50 movements, approximately half of which are responses to poetic images by Middleton.

Moments of stasis are gratefully received. A case in point is the stark “Intermezzo (D)” of the first Book, a dark modernist chorale. Other movements take this sort of stasis and contrast it with violent outbursts, while one of the longest movements of Book 1, the 14th, is a telling funeral march that transforms into exploratory canons, bookended by a repeated intermezzo.

This is disquieting music, to be sure. It holds its spell not because it offers windows of hope but because it forces us to examine ourselves as we are now. The deathly images of the chosen poetry act as visceral reminders of our own mortality. The repetition of movements, either verbatim, altered, or entirely re-examined, is a feature of Hersch’s structural play, framing large statements or simply altering our viewpoints. It all leads to the climactic 48th movement, a vast Mahlerian procession. The final two movements act as a sort of leave-taking, the simple mechanics of the final statement—36 chords slowly heading towards the extreme upper end of the keyboard’s range—being all the more effective for that simplicity, that openness.

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:42 (fourteen years ago)

It's on Vanguard, and it is on eMusic, but as is often the case with eMusic classical stuff, it's labeled/sorted wrong - it's under Miranda Cuckson's name (which is actually somewhat fair, as she is a tirelessly champion of new music and deserves name recognition). It's here:

http://www.emusic.com/album/Miranda-Cuckson-Hersch-the-wreckage-of-flowers-MP3-Download/12330504.html

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:43 (fourteen years ago)

Cool-- I have cred on there right now so I will listen and possibly DL tonite!

(PS yeah their "artist" field is fkin useless for classical-- I usually search using the "composer" option)

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:45 (fourteen years ago)

I grabbed it in mid-January, have listened several times & am listening again now - to me the effect of this music is so vivid, it's like discovering a new planetary system. but I can totally see how if somebody hadn't had any time for Berg/Webern/Weber, this would be tough - though to me - this is profoundly lyrical, just in a less metrical (is that a musical term? I mean in the poetic sense) way than lyricism often implies

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:46 (fourteen years ago)

the piano passage toward the end of part XIV of the wreckage of flowers is to me so heavily weighted with feeling...eager to hear how you like this

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:47 (fourteen years ago)

Psyched to hear it!

every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 3 March 2011 22:49 (fourteen years ago)

Yes. If only for the existence of Gaspard de la nuit. "Ondine" floors me every time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98Wqx1JXw90

We make bouquets that fade immediately. (Turangalila), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 00:17 (fourteen years ago)

too close for comfort

save a tree, write a twitter (bernard snowy), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 00:32 (fourteen years ago)

Broke my long absence to vote for Ravel, who is untouchable.
― it also takes hip-hip with it (Eric H.), Thursday, March 3, 2011 11:14 AM (4 days ago)

Well, 'twas fun while it lasted.

it also takes hip-hip with it (Eric H.), Tuesday, 8 March 2011 02:01 (fourteen years ago)

how many voted for "clair de lune" though

corey, Tuesday, 8 March 2011 03:12 (fourteen years ago)

one month passes...

nah, Bartók vs. Schoenberg vs. Scriabin 8)

― corey, Thursday, March 3, 2011 9:52 PM (1 month ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Well, Schoenberg doesn't have a huge volume of solo pcs though, despite their significance.

I'd say Bartok v Scriabin v Prokofiev myself. Prok's large solo piano ouevre is very very underrated outside of a couple of sonatas...

― every man and woman is a sitar (Jon Lewis), Thursday, March 3, 2011 9:56 PM (1 month ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

I knew literally nothing about Scriabin other than his name until these posts on this thread. I think I had something by him on an IOrchestral Music From Russia music club disc but that's it. I now have over a GB of Scriabin on the hard drive and have been listening to him literally every day for the past week. Thank you Jon & corey for these posts; this guy is a titan, his music is bringing me immense pleasure.

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 20 April 2011 16:24 (fourteen years ago)

& thanks too to nakchivan

five gone cats from Boston (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Wednesday, 20 April 2011 16:25 (fourteen years ago)

I've been delving more into his piano music also. The late sonatas are just otherworldly.

corey, Wednesday, 20 April 2011 20:53 (fourteen years ago)

cool

now to the poem of ecstasy.....

Some other race (nakhchivan), Wednesday, 20 April 2011 20:59 (fourteen years ago)

two months pass...

Have started listening to some of this stuff after a looong break, feel like I appreciate it more having gone off and listened to a ton of Bill Evans (and others) in the meantime. Being an unreformed rockist, I'm looking for album recommendations for all the above to be enjoyed in nice 50 minute chunks. Overall performer recommendations would be good too - some performers seem to be massively better at interpreting the material than others.

B-Boy Bualadh Bos (ecuador_with_a_c), Monday, 27 June 2011 06:06 (fourteen years ago)

Man, the results of this one still make me so angry.

ephendophile (Eric H.), Monday, 27 June 2011 17:10 (fourteen years ago)

There was no Prokofiev option :)

Borrowed from the library a rec of Gieseking playing Children's Corner (most of the recordings from the 50s) and other pieces, gonna listen to it tonight.

corey, Tuesday, 28 June 2011 02:10 (fourteen years ago)

I guess it's silly to be mad about wishing for a two-way tie between Debussy and Ravel.

ephendophile (Eric H.), Tuesday, 28 June 2011 03:37 (fourteen years ago)

Just got this

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61SAlTAVg%2BL._SL500_AA300_.jpg

It's gonna keep me busy for a while

B-Boy Bualadh Bos (ecuador_with_a_c), Tuesday, 28 June 2011 08:12 (fourteen years ago)

I've been interested in that set. He plays a piano from Ravel's time right?

corey, Tuesday, 28 June 2011 12:42 (fourteen years ago)

Yup. A 1901 Steinway.

B-Boy Bualadh Bos (ecuador_with_a_c), Tuesday, 28 June 2011 13:18 (fourteen years ago)

one month passes...

nakh & Jon and anybody else, did you investigate Michael Hersch any further? I thought of starting a Michael Hersch Appreciation thread, he merits one imo, but it'd be a pretty windswept thread I think.

I'm in a hotel in the middle of nowhere listening hard to The Vanishing Pavilions - what incredibly visual music; Hersch is a lover of poetry and tries to shape a music that responds to it (romantic in his heart I think!) with incredible success. Putting my few thoughts very drily here but this music has great scope & depth, is for the ages honestly - deeply inspiring, challenging, satisfying.

pathos of the unwarranted encore (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 1 August 2011 12:37 (fourteen years ago)

Every time this thread's revived, another stab in the heart.

third-generation stripper (Eric H.), Monday, 1 August 2011 12:50 (fourteen years ago)

aww man I should start the Michael Hersch thread to spare the feelings of Ravel voters, whose grief is not without some merit

pathos of the unwarranted encore (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Monday, 1 August 2011 13:02 (fourteen years ago)

Lately I'm begging to think Schubert might be my favorite composer for piano.

corey, Monday, 1 August 2011 14:07 (fourteen years ago)

Aero, I have had Hersch's long violin + piano work on my eMusic Saved list since your earlier posts. Mebbe this is the month I grab it. The samples are very, very interesting.

Axolotl with an Atlatl (Jon Lewis), Monday, 1 August 2011 15:31 (fourteen years ago)

There are few things as transcendent as Ashkenazy's recording of "Ondine" from Gaspard de la nuit.

The Not Liking Radiohead Awards (Turangalila), Monday, 1 August 2011 15:57 (fourteen years ago)

No Faure option? I probably would have voted Satie.

o. nate, Monday, 1 August 2011 19:33 (fourteen years ago)

Faurés nocturnes for piano are so lovely.

The Not Liking Radiohead Awards (Turangalila), Monday, 1 August 2011 19:39 (fourteen years ago)

Faure vs. Koechlin vs. De Severac

Axolotl with an Atlatl (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 2 August 2011 15:21 (fourteen years ago)

De Severwho?

corey, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 02:14 (fourteen years ago)

If this is some fin de siècle composer I didn't know about, tell me more!

corey, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 02:14 (fourteen years ago)

Every time this thread's revived, another stab in the heart

no way! Debussy is one of those composers who has the aura of establishment, but in actuality, I run into not enough people who rep for him. underrated in my book

Dominique, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 02:17 (fourteen years ago)

Totally, especially the last three sonatas. They're a whole other world.

corey, Wednesday, 3 August 2011 02:20 (fourteen years ago)

this thread makes me want to listen to every single thing mentioned in it

davon cuul II (m bison), Wednesday, 3 August 2011 03:04 (fourteen years ago)

Corey, Deodat de Severac was roughly a contemporary of Debussy and Ravel and is definitely within that musical orbit. Add a more french-rustic feel as well as more frequent visits to musical Spain. There is a cheap 3CD set of Aldo Ciccolini performing the whole oeuvre.

For another lesser known figure from that world of piano magic, seek out Decaux, whose sole piano work is on a fantastic Fredric Chiu recital disc on Harmonia Mundi which also includes my favorite rec of Ravel's Miroirs and a beautiful rendition of Schoenberg's op. 11.

Axolotl with an Atlatl (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 4 August 2011 16:13 (fourteen years ago)

Thank you! I know Decaux's "Clair de Lune" — odd, lilting little Scriabinesque reverie. Apparently he destroyed everything else he wrote?

corey, Thursday, 4 August 2011 16:19 (fourteen years ago)

aero ~ i hadn't heard hersh previously, i looked at what's on youtube and it's interesting, quite compressed and lapidary though the full 'vanishing pavillions' is seemingly two hrs long....i will probably investigate more fully in time

nakhchivan, Thursday, 4 August 2011 16:20 (fourteen years ago)

dominique otm

The Not Liking Radiohead Awards (Turangalila), Thursday, 4 August 2011 18:37 (fourteen years ago)

Yeah, I forgot to OTM that when dominique posted it but I clamorously agree.

Axolotl with an Atlatl (Jon Lewis), Thursday, 4 August 2011 19:01 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

happy birthday Debussy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RQwYz3-tN5A

Dominique, Thursday, 23 August 2012 02:55 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

Votre âme est un paysage choisi
Que vont charmant masques et bergamasques
Jouant du luth et dansant et quasi
Tristes sous leurs déguisements fantasques.

Tout en chantant sur le mode mineur
L'amour vainqueur et la vie opportune
Ils n'ont pas l'air de croire à leur bonheur
Et leur chanson se mêle au clair de lune,

Au calme clair de lune triste et beau,
Qui fait rêver les oiseaux dans les arbres
Et sangloter d'extase les jets d'eau,
Les grands jets d'eau sveltes parmi les marbres.

Mordy , Thursday, 14 November 2013 01:44 (eleven years ago)

i'm legit having an intense emotional reaction to this song

Mordy , Thursday, 14 November 2013 01:44 (eleven years ago)

one year passes...

The greatest living Debussy and Chopin pianist, Ivan Moravec, has died at 84. His recordings are delicate miracles of light and shade. The Vox 2CD with Debussy's Images and Estampes on the first disc and various Chopin on the second is an ideal introduction to his playing.

He had a relatively small discography. Schubert D960 was in his live repertoire but there was never a recording. Maybe a live capture will come out. There was also an astonishing LP of Janacek on Nonesuch which has never been on CD.

Corn on the macabre (Jon not Jon), Monday, 10 August 2015 16:35 (ten years ago)

moravec playing chopin's preludes & nocturnes <3

drash, Monday, 10 August 2015 18:07 (ten years ago)

i wish to god i had ever seen him perform

Corn on the macabre (Jon not Jon), Monday, 10 August 2015 18:16 (ten years ago)

two years pass...

only bumped this because it is the only thread w ravel in title but can someone give me a riyl Ravel String Quartet ?

flopson, Thursday, 22 February 2018 23:48 (seven years ago)

I am so non-expert it doesn't matter, but I love the Melos Quartet recording fwiw*

*not much

calzino, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:05 (seven years ago)

Take your pick among the Arcanto, Belcea and Ébène quartets. All are top-notch modern recordings.

Not a big fan of the Melos, btw (sorry calzino).

xp

pomenitul, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:06 (seven years ago)

np, loads of stuff I like is always shit with classical headz.

calzino, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:09 (seven years ago)

looking for RIYL not recordings (but i will check out recordings mentioned--the one i have is Alan Berg)

flopson, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:10 (seven years ago)

Oh, 'recommend if you like' (had to look it up).

The Debussy quartet is its obvious touchstone. It's featured alongside Ravel's on all three of the records I suggested. The first two also come with Dutilleux's quartet, the third with Fauré's. Give those a listen if you haven't already.

Otherwise, there's always Szymanowski and Enescu, even Britten. Try Lucien Durosoir as well.

pomenitul, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:18 (seven years ago)

I read flopson's request as for recommendations of other works than the Ravel SQ?

The simplest answer must be the Debussy SQ, with which it is often paired? Otherwise, I dunno, possibly some of the Fauré chamber music (a piano trio*, two piano quartets**, two piano quintets*** and a string quartet****)?

*) ie piano, violin, cello
**) ie piano trio plus viola
***) ie piano quartet plus violin
****) ie piano quintet minus piano

anatol_merklich, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:19 (seven years ago)

Never even heard of Durosoir; intriguing; thanks, pomenitul!

anatol_merklich, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:21 (seven years ago)

merci https://media.giphy.com/media/VZbuV1vWMzEuQ/giphy.gif

flopson, Friday, 23 February 2018 00:21 (seven years ago)

Man, the results of this one still make me so angry.
― ephendophile (Eric H.), Monday, June 27, 2011 12:10 PM (six years ago)

Every time this thread's revived, another stab in the heart.
― third-generation stripper (Eric H.), Monday, August 1, 2011 7:50 AM (six years ago)

"Minneapolis" (barf) (Eric H.), Friday, 23 February 2018 00:32 (seven years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.