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JohnRice
- John Rice
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Re: Piano
Faves would be too many Beethoven sonatas to list, but check out the second mvt of #27 for starters. Some non-solo faves would be The Archduke Trio and concerto #5, just for starters.
I also love that Rachmaninoff prelude you linked. My favorite recording of it is by Andrei Gavrilov on EMI, and is no doubt OOP.
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- Joined: October 1998
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Re: Piano
It's hard to select one from so many worthy performances, but to me a standout is the early Alfred Brendel recording of the "Waldstein" sonata.
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Re: Piano
I recently found a vinyl album in excellent condition at the Goodwill store, and bought it ($.99). I had it already, but this one was in outstanding condition. It's George Winston's "December" album. He's also a very good pianist. If you haven't heard him, check him out.
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Tim Tucker
- Tim Tucker
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Re: Piano
One of my favorite collections is an old Columbia Masterworks anthology of Scriabin pieces by Vladimir Horowitz. I especially love the Tenth Piano Sonata and Vers la flamme.
Other favorites are the two Janáček recitals (DG and BMG) recorded by Rudolf Firkušný. No one knew this music better than he did.
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Re: Piano
Many good works suggested here so far, but one that has not yet made it is Tchaikovsky's piano concerto no 1, which is a truly great piece.
Also, although not originally written for the piano, Bach's Goldberg variations is something I can listen to again and again.
In a different style, Keith Jarret's Köln concert is an astounding piano piece.
/Mikael
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- Joined: October 1998
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Re: Piano
Quote:
| Also, although not originally written for the piano, Bach's Goldberg variations is something I can listen to again and again. |
Actually, that's exactly WHY Bach wrote it.
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- Joined: October 1998
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Re: Piano
Actually historians haven't decided whether Bach had 23 children because he fugued too much, or because he had poor control over his organ stops.
Feline videophiles Susie and Dukie.
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keithling
- Keith Ling
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Quote:
Originally Posted by
Ed Moxley 
I recently found a vinyl album in excellent condition at the Goodwill store, and bought it ($.99). I had it already, but this one was in outstanding condition. It's George Winston's "December" album. He's also a very good pianist. If you haven't heard him, check him out.

What makes George Winston's recordings so enjoyable is the recording and production quality. I believe this was recorded on a Studer two-track master machine at 30 ips with absolutely no processing. The other factors were the piano itself, the mics used, and most of all, the placement of the mics.
The best three albums by George are Autumn, Winter Into Spring, and December.
If you're big on vinyl, Windham Hill pressings were about the only decent vinyl produced back in the 80s.
I once heard a very high end system with Snell Speakers and a few boat anchor size tube amps that required their own separate circuits. The salesman played December. It was amazing to hear how the sound stage gradually became more and more realistic as the tubes warmed up.
After about 5 minutes, I could close my eyes and swear George was playing a piano in that room.
Major fan of music in 5.1, especially Prog.