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Beethoven: Piano Sonatas [Box Set]
Ludwig van Beethoven, Emil Gilels
Beethoven: Piano Sonatas [Box Set]
Genre: Classical
 
  •  Track Listings (2) - Disc #1
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #2
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #3
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #4
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #5
  •  Track Listings (3) - Disc #6
  •  Track Listings (5) - Disc #7
  •  Track Listings (4) - Disc #8
  •  Track Listings (2) - Disc #9

Celebrate the life of the great Russian pianist, Emil Gilels. Three great packages that represent his long and illustrious recording career. Early Recordings features rare tracks that were made from 1935 to 1955 for the...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Ludwig van Beethoven, Emil Gilels
Title: Beethoven: Piano Sonatas [Box Set]
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Original Release Date: 1/1/2006
Re-Release Date: 11/14/2006
Album Type: Box set
Genre: Classical
Styles: Chamber Music, Forms & Genres, Sonatas, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830)
Number of Discs: 9
SwapaCD Credits: 9
UPC: 028947763604

Synopsis

Album Description
Celebrate the life of the great Russian pianist, Emil Gilels. Three great packages that represent his long and illustrious recording career. Early Recordings features rare tracks that were made from 1935 to 1955 for the Melodiya label in Moscow and made available on CD for the first time with state-of-the-art remastering. Gilels's complete Mozart recordings on Deutsche Grammophon include his celebrated performance of Mozart's last piano concerto. Includes the Mozart "two-piano" concerto performed with Gilels daughter Elena, complemented by an unforgettable live recital from Salzburg, now back in print. Complete Beethoven sonatas includes Pathétique, Moonlight, Appasionata, The Tempest, Waldstein and Hammerklavier on 9 discs. Released to coincide with Emil Gilels 90th birthday year, he was born in 1916.
 

CD Reviews

Glorious! - Not all of the sonatas, but all superply played
R. Lane | Tracy, CA USA | 08/27/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Universal made my day when they finally released this set in the USA a few years ago. Indeed, I count this the most welcome box set from Deutsche Grammophon in the last 10 years!



DG intended to record all of the sonatas with Gilels, but he met with the fate of death before its completion. A little sad indeed, for every minute of the nine CDs in this collection keeps me on the edge of my seat. For years, I thought Pollini was the ultimate in the late sonatas (see Beethoven: Die Späten Klaviersonaten); then I heard Gilels in op. 101 and my jaw dropped. And the same goes for just about every other sonata in this collection when I compared it to my personal "reference" recording.



But, far and away the grand prize in this set is the Eroica Variations. Brendel's Vox recording (albeit in a trashy Murray Hill LP pressing) got me hooked first back in the mid 1970s. The Arrau release kept me going. And then I bought the Gilels recording in this box (at full price when it was issued in 1982 on CD) and rediscovered the work all over. Gilels plays with a dynamic range I've never found matched for the Eroica Variations, or any other solo piano work for that matter. And the recorded sound is absolutely amazing. Indeed, before the CD age, I recall playing many favorite LPs "to death", wearing them out with even the finest equipment (which wasn't "supposed" to happen with reasonably good turntables/styli). When the CD age dawned, every one thought the age of permanence was upon us. Well, I played the Gilels Eroica CD "to death", far more than with any LP. So much so that the CD truly became "worn out", and for myself the notion of CD permanence vanished.



Enough said.



Get this at any price. Warning though. You may get hooked and use up all of your vacation time listening to it, or even lose your job. Be prepared.

"
The Emil Gilels Legacy - essential, despite being incomplete
Discophage | France | 12/06/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"DG has gathered on this convenient 9 CD set, all the Beethoven Sonatas recorded for them by Emil Gilels in his later years. He died, in 1985, shortly before his 69th birthday, before he could complete the cycle. They were originally published as recorded, over more than a decade, between 1972 (Sonatas No.21 "Waldstein" and 28 op. 101 - Gilels was 55 then) and 1985 (three releases then: the two so-called "Electoral" Sonatas WoO 47/1 & 2, here on CD 1, paired with No.11 op 22; No.5 op. 10/1, No.10 op. 14/2 and 19 op. 49/1; and finally No. 31 op. 109 & 32 op. 110). Some of those originally released on LP were also previously reissued on CD, but in reshuffled couplings, sometimes even duplicating each other (as the 1972 Waldstein, the 1973 Appassionata and the 1974 "Les Adieux", Beethoven: Sonataen - Waldstein, Les Adieux, Appassionata, or the same Appassionata with the Pathétique from 1980 and # 31 from 1985 (haven't found an entry on this website, it is listed under ASIN B0002UJJCS on the European sister companies, part of the Penguin Rosette collection), or again the pairing of 27 from 1974, 28 from 1972, 30 & 31, Beethoven: Klaviersonaten Nos. 27, 28, 30 & 31 [Germany]). Some others from the LP era were reissued only in the previous box set collating all of these recordings (Beethoven: 29 Piano Sonatas / Gilels - not an entirely honest title, as there are 29 Sonatas there only by dint of including the two early sonatas without opus number) and never made it on individual CDs, at least on DG (some were licensed by Olympia) : No. 6 op. 10/2, 12 op. 26, 16 op. 31/1, 25 op. 79.



As the other reviewers have noted, the sound is uniformly good, and I don't hear any significant differences between the earlier and the later recordings - maybe slightly more vivid presence in these (and, over headphones, the occasional rumble of cars in the distance).



The liner notes contain only an interesting general presentation of Gilels and Beethoven, but no analyses or presentations of the sonatas themselves. I'm particularly happy to have the two (out of three) early and obscure "Electoral" Sonatas from 1783 - nothing to do with democracy, they were dedicated to the Kurfürst or Archbishop-Elector of Cologne Maximilian Francis von Habsburg-Lothringen: they were in fact Beethoven's first piano Sonatas and I find their Haydn-esque wit and Sturm-und-Drang atmosphere irresistible. The essay contained in the liner notes is also very imprecise about which Sonatas Gilels didn't live long enough to record: they are No. 1 op. 2/1, 9 op. 14/1, 22 op. 54, 24 op. 74 "A Thérèse" and the ultimate one, 32 op. 111. An irretrievable loss: there are no other recordings, studio or live, of any of these Sonatas in Gilels' discography (the website of the label DOREMI hosts a magnificent Gilels discography compiled by Ates Tanin, to which I am entirely indebted for this review).



For this reason only, this set obviously cannot be recommended as your only set of complete Beethoven Sonatas. As to the point of determining whether those we have are "the best" versions, it is a pretty senseless one, I think: ever since the advent of the recording process, there have been numerous complete recordings by the greatest giants of the piano in the 20th Century (starting with Schnabel, Backhaus and you name `em). And that's not mentioning those giants who have not recorded the complete cycle but only samples (Richter comes to mind, of course). Suffice to say that Gilels is one of these giants. No one seriously interested in the Beethoven Sonatas should fail to listen to him.



Yet beware: as I write, the demanded price on the present website seems abnormally high. It sells for significantly less on the European sister companies, and I personally bought my own set on the famous Internet auction site for less than 20 $, postage included.



"
Stunning
Gilbert Robinson | 10/08/2009
(5 out of 5 stars)

"While I have yet to hear all the recordings on this set, I can say I have never heard a more compelling performance of the ones I have heard, including the Waldstein and Appassionata. Gilels plays with incredible energy and focus, clarity and passion. I'm simply in awe of his performances."