Performances that are crystalline in their perfection
James Skrydlak | Pella, Iowa | 08/03/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)
"My reaction to this was exactly the opposite of that of the reviewer from Minneapolis; I immediately liked these performances more than Uchida and Sanderling's performances of the third and fourth concerti. We agree, however, that these are wonderful. Both pianist and conductor combine attention to every note with a sense for each concerto's overall structure, and Uchida's pianism is, as always, flawless. The best performances of both pieces that I've heard."
Beaty and comunication withn secure classical discipline
ARMANDO TRIGUEIROS | Azores archipelago, Portugal | 06/23/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Excelente phrasing and dynamics from the orchestra as well as from the piano soloist Uchida, a result of meticolous study os the score. Even with modern instruments the orchestra sounds like a classical orchestra, with very clean textures including the timpani.The perfect equilibrium bethowen a modern piano, modern taste and academical research. Virtuoso playing not only in the fingers, but in mataining during the entire performance the previous conceptions of the work. Magnificent!Uchida here has more drive than in Mozart Piano Concertos."
Performance with a deep thought
ARMANDO TRIGUEIROS | 11/29/1998
(5 out of 5 stars)
"At first hearing, it was not as capivating as her performance of Beethoven's No.3 & 4, which was preceedently issued. But as I put this CD on my player, it gets fascinating. She puts a lot of implications and meanings on every note, but it is not air-tight as her Schubert. Her plaing at Cadenza is, again, just awesome. I prefer this to Argerich's recording on DG. Strongly recommended."
Mitsuko Uchida and Beethoven: The Perfect Marriage
Grady Harp | Los Angeles, CA United States | 01/07/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Gifted pianist Mitsuko Uchida is one of the reigning masters of the repertoire of Mozart, Schubert, and Beethoven (though she is a marvel in works by 20th Century composers also) and her thorough involvement with the Piano Concerti of Beethoven is best appreciated when the opportunity arises to hear the entire cycle performed over a period of several nights, or in this case, in a series of CDs that capture all the concerti.
This recording of the B-flat major concerto (which because of its revision in 1801 of the original 1795 composition is traditionally called No.2) and the C major concerto of 1798 (known as the No. 1) is a fine pairing. Both of these early concerti have moments of flight that suit Uchida's extraordinary technical skills and each contains a middle slow movement that focuses on Uchida's sensitivity to lingering, heartfelt and elegantly warm phrasing. Her involvement in the Largo of the C major concerto is otherworldly and meltingly liquid. Likewise her keyboard singing of the Adagio from the B-flat major concerto is as quiet and longing as a line can be.
Uchida's communication with the orchestra, here under the direction of Kurt Sanderling, is unique. She is currently performing the concerto cycle in its entirety with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Esa-Pekka Salonen in the acoustically perfect Disney Hall and one can only hope that she will record the miracles that are happening in this collaboration. Watching her involvement with each section of the orchestra as she awaits her entrances reinforces the quality of conversation that is unsurpassed among current contemporaries. Until that possible recording cycle is made, this CD is a fine substitute. Uchida is magic and her devotion to these Beethoven works is stunning. Grady Harp, January 2005"