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Barber & Ives: Piano Sonatas
 
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Barber & Ives: Piano Sonatas

~ Samuel Barber (Composer), Charles Ives (Composer), Jaime Martin (Flute), Marc-André Hamelin (Piano)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: £12.69 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this with Liszt: Paganini Studies & Schubert March ~ Franz Liszt

Barber & Ives: Piano Sonatas + Liszt: Paganini Studies & Schubert March
Price For Both: £25.38

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Product details

  • Composer: Samuel Barber, Charles Ives
  • Audio CD (23 Jul 2004)
  • SPARS Code: DDD
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Hyperion
  • ASIN: B0002JEJQK
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 181,979 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in these categories:

    #55 in  Music > Classical Instrumental > Composers > H-L > Ives
    #57 in  Music > Classical Instrumental > Composers > A-B > Barber

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Track Listings

1. Emerson: Slowly
2. Hawthorne: Very Fast
3. The Alcotts
4. Thoreau: Starting Slowly And Quietly
5. Allegro Energico
6. Allegro Vivace E Leggiero
7. Adagio Mesto
8. Fuga: Allegro Con Spirito

On this CD:
  1. Sonata for Piano No. 2, 'Concord, Mass.: 1840-60'
    Composed by Charles E Ives
    with Marc-André Hamelin

  2. Sonata for Piano
    Composed by Samuel Barber
    with Marc-André Hamelin


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Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Embarrassment of Riches, 27 Oct 2004
By J Scott Morrison (Middlebury VT, USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This CD contains probably the two greatest piano sonatas by American composers. Some might disagree, but few will disagree that they are great, if not at the very top of any list. [See below for comments about the Barber Sonata; most of this review will be about the Ives.] As to the Ives, frankly, I agree with Lawrence Gilman's reaction when he heard the première by John Kirkpatrick of the 'Concord' Sonata in 1938: 'This sonata is exceptionally great music--it is, indeed, the greatest music composed by an American, and the most deeply and essentially American in impulse and implication.' I can think of no other American music that stirs me as deeply as this. And, mirabile dictu, we have had three wonderful new recordings of it in the past year, corresponding roughly with the fiftieth anniversary of Charles Ives's death in 1954. The three pianists are magnificent: Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Steven Mayer and, on this disc, Marc-André Hamelin. I've reviewed the Mayer here at Amazon. I had nothing to add to the raves by Amazon customer reviewers about the Aimard and so I didn't review it, but I count it among the best recordings of the year. And then there is this newly issued recording by Hamelin. He recorded it once before, in 1988, and although this performance is similar in many respects, one can feel that he is at greater ease with it than sixteen years ago. Both performances are wonderful, but this one is, as I said to a friend recently, 'a corker.'

I am not an Ives scholar, like fellow Amazon reviewer Bob Zeidler, and I hope that he will be adding his review to this page some time soon. But I do have a few thoughts about this recording, and some brief comparisons with the two other recent issues by Aimard and Mayer. As I said in my Mayer review, the easiest course is simply to buy all three, but I recognize that might not be the choice than many will make. So, how does one make a choice about which version to buy? Well, first of all there is the question of price: Mayer's is on the budget Naxos label; the other two are at full price. Couplings might make a difference to some. Aimard's includes Susan Graham singing seventeen of Ives's songs accompanied by Aimard; they are simply smashing. Mayer's includes other shorter piano works: 'Varied Air and Variations,' 'The Celestial Railroad,' and Transcription No. 1 from 'Emerson.' Also, the four movements of the 'Concord' Sonata are separately introduced by actor Kerry Shale reading appropriate passages from Ives's 'Essays Before a Sonata.' (The Essays are the length of a short book and can be accessed online at Project Gutenberg for the interested among you. I take pride in having proofread the 'Essays' for Project Gutenberg. If you catch some typos, they're mine!) Hamelin's CD, of course, is coupled with the Barber Sonata.

How do the performances differ? Well, for starters, Aimard includes the optional tiny viola part at the end of the 'Emerson' movement (played by viola superstar, Tabea Zummermann) and the flute part in 'Thoreau' (played by flute superstar Emanuel Pahud). Nice as this is, it is not a deal-maker or -breaker. I cannot vouch for the fact that all three pianists play precisely the same version of the 'Concord.' I didn't catch any differences but there may be some because there are as many different versions of the sonata as there are leaves on a tree--Ives kept making changes. I believe, though, that all three primarily are using the version Ives made in the late 1940s. Movement timings might be instructive: Hamelin's traversal is by far the fastest at 42'54"; Aimard's is 48'16", Mayer's roughtly 52', not counting Shale's readings in between movements. Hamelin's 'Emerson' is almost a full three minutes faster than Mayer's. And his version of the ferociously difficult 'Hawthorne' is a full two minutes faster than either of the other versions. Further, Hamelin's inflections seem more finely nuanced, even at the greater speed. Still, his approach seems almost romantic at times, especially as compared to Mayer's which seems more, for lack of a better word, 'modern.' Aimard's (and perhaps I'm thinking this simply because of his long association with Messiaen and his music) seems more impressionistic. The sonata contains a great deal of layering and blurring of textures and all three pianists manage that extremely well. Where Mayer and Hamelin seem to have an edge is in the sharp 'American' outlines of the quicker rhythms. I particularly like what they do with the march rhythms (e.g. when 'Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean' is quoted) and the proto-jazz sections (although, to be honest, Aimard gets in some licks, too).

The more I think about it, the more I realize I get something from each version and and I wouldn't want to be without any of them. I guess my initial impulse to say 'Buy all three' was stronger than I realized. Buy all three!!

Finally, I must say that the performance of the Barber Sonata is the most vital I've ever heard. Not only is the popular final movement, the Fugue, played with point and almost inhuman aplomb, but the powerful, dissonant first movement, the almost Mendelssohnian (well, light-textured anyhow) second movement, and the lovely adagio are exceedingly convincing.

An extraordinary release. I'd hate to be the folks who have to give out prizes for best piano performance or best CD of twentieth-century music for 2004. Maybe they could award a tie!

Scott Morrison

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4 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Hamelin's Best, 11 Nov 2007
By Scriabinmahler (Cambridge UK) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
I've always enjoyed any recording made by Hamelin since the release of the amazing Scriabin Sonatas, but recently I noticed lack of depth in his playing in some recordings like his Schumann Fantasie in C and this Ives / Barber Sonata recordings. I was a bit disappointed as critics were lavishing their praises on this one. Ives Sonata sounds like monotonous contrast of loud and quiet and lacks intensity for about first 20 minutes or so due to surprisingly one dimensional excution of forte and fortissimo. Hamelin's earlier recording of the same work (New World label) is far more intense and profound even though flute is not included.

Cool, Matter-of-fact rendition of Barber Sonata too lacks intensity or dare devil excitement of Horowitz. No where near to match Leon McCawley's riveting performance. Personally I think such sonatas demands more risk-taking and boldness. I would prefer a more dangerous and aggressive performance with some wrong notes than immaculate yet too cool-headed performance like this. Is he becoming too complacent with his virtuosity?
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