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Schubert: Grand Duo Variations D813
Schubert, Barenboim, Lupu
Schubert: Grand Duo Variations D813
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
 
In 1966 Lupu won the prestigious Van Cliburn Competition and took the top prize at the — Leeds International Piano Competition in 1969. Radu Lupu has made a musical home for — himself in the rich nineteenth century repertoir...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Schubert, Barenboim, Lupu
Title: Schubert: Grand Duo Variations D813
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Warner Classics
Original Release Date: 1/1/2008
Re-Release Date: 7/29/2008
Genres: Special Interest, Classical
Styles: Marches, Chamber Music, Historical Periods, Classical (c.1770-1830)
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 825646965700

Synopsis

Product Description
In 1966 Lupu won the prestigious Van Cliburn Competition and took the top prize at the
Leeds International Piano Competition in 1969. Radu Lupu has made a musical home for
himself in the rich nineteenth century repertoire Schubert, Schumann, Beethoven, and
Brahms especially.
Barenboim has a rich recorded repertoire as a conductor, pianist, accompanist, and chamber
music player. In December 2007, Warner Classics released a 5CD set to celebrate Barenboim s
65th birthday titled The Pianist. The set includes selected piano works of Bach, Mozart,
Schubert Brahms, Piazzolla and others.
Franz Schubert s Trois marches militaires (Three Military Marches), D. 733 are among the
many works for piano, four hands that the composer produced around the time of his first
summer stay at the Count of Ezterházy s summer home in Zseliz (1818).
Piano, four-hand music was, by and large, the only Schubert instrumental music that
publishers cared to purchase during his short lifetime; the Three Military Marches, D. 733
were published in 1826 as Opus 51. Each is a true ternary (ABA) design; the central episode
is called a trio, and the opening music is recalled, verbatim, for the closing section.

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CD Reviews

A "Symphony" for a Single Instrument?
Giordano Bruno | Wherever I am, I am. | 07/28/2010
(5 out of 5 stars)

"... although an instrument requiring both hands of two players? Franz Schubert's 'Grand Duo' is often described as such, so I deliberately sat still and listened to hear whether the description is apt. It isn't. And I'm thrilled to declare that it isn't. It's the most idiomatic music for 'Hammerklavier" (aka piano) that one could imagine. That's a large portion of its greatness. The same idiomatic pianism is at the heart of the 'Variations on an Original Theme', though the three Military Marches could be, and have been, arranged for 'band' performance. If I were prone to indefensible hyperbole -- of course, I'm not! -- I might declare that Schubert invented idiomatic piano music. Yes, I hear you, Beethoven fans! But Beethoven wrote great music for Klavier, while Schubert wrote great Klaviermusik. Yes, there was Mozart before either, but I have a weasel-out: Mozart wrote for four-hand fortepiano, not piano forte. (Though I wouldn't mind hearing this Grand Duo performed on the lighter, clearer sort of piano that Schubert himself played and composed for ....)



Piano compositions for four hands were a "market-driven" genre in the era of Beethoven and Schubert, intended for the domestic music-making of middle-class families without the means or space for two instruments. They were necessarily within the prowess of confident amateurs. Schubert's four-hand piano pieces are more challenging than that, but they achieve brilliance not from the virtuosity of the twenty digits required but rather from their lush melodies and their chromatic adventures. There are some amusing stories about the provenance of these pieces, by the way, involving Schubert's infatuation with a daughter of the Esterhazys, but I'll let you read them for yourselves in the liner notes.



Of all the contrivances and apparatuses of music-making, the modern grand piano is the one I find least enjoyment in hearing. The "equal temperament" that is the heart-and-soul of the instrument discomfits my ears. The barrage of overtones and sympathetic resonances amounts to acoustic turmoil for me, almost as unpleasant at times as deliberate 'feedback' on an electric guitar. So for me to praise a CD of piano compositions should be taken as high praise indeed. Pianist Radu Lupu is less well known to the majority of American music-lovers than some of the Germans and Russians, but he has a connoisseurs' reputation as both a technician and an interpreter. He has recorded the Grand Duo with other 'second' pianists, but this duo with Daniel Barenboim is the only one I've heard. It seems quite well done, to my piano-distrusting ears, although if I'd been present in the studio as a musical dramaturge, I might have suggested a dryer, more transparent texture in many passages."