PAKM 058 - BACKHAUS Beethoven Edition: Volume 8 - Piano Sonatas 30-32 German
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  Wilhelm Backhaus, piano
Recorded in 1952 and 1954

XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, April 2012
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Wilhelm Backhaus

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©2012 Pristine Audio.

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The 2012 Backhaus
Beethoven Edition

1. Sonatas 1-4
2. Sonatas 5-9

3. Sonatas 10-13
4. Sonatas 14-17
5. Sonatas 18-22
6. Sonatas 23-26
7. Sonatas 27-29

8. Sonatas 30-32
9. Concerto 1, Diabelli
10. Concertos 2 & 3
11. Concertos 4 & 5

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Eighth and final volume in Backhaus's magnificent first Beethoven Sonata cycle

Long only available on rare imports, and in new 32-bit XR remasters - this is unmissable

 

  • BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No. 30 in E major, Op. 109 [notes / score]
    Recorded July 1950
    Issued as Decca LXT 2535 and on 78s as AX361-62

  • BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No. 31 in A flat major, Op. 110 [notes / score]
    Recorded November 1953
    Issued as Decca LXT 2939

  • BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No. 32 in C minor, Op. 111 [notes / score]
    Recorded November 1953
    Issued as Decca LXT 2939


    Wilhelm Backhaus
    piano
    Recording producer: Victor Olof
    Recorded at Victoria Hall, Geneva

FLAC Downloads includes a PDF score of each sonata

 

"In his integral recording of Beethoven's piano sonatas, Wilhelm Backhaus completes the canon with an impressive performance of the last sonata, Op. 111, and a performance of Op. 110 so beautiful as to be perhaps the finest thing he has put on record.

There is unlikely to be disagreement that these two sonatas and the Diabelli Variations are the most sublime music composed for the piano. The A flat Sonata moves from a cantabile to a recitative of speaking eloquence, whose infinite sadness is overcome by a fugue; the recitative returns, and then the inverted form of the fugue finally triumphs. Fugue, in late Beethoven, seems to typify the power of the human will. The last sonata opens with what sounds like a fugue subject, and the power of will conquers so that we reach another world altogether: again a cantabile, the Arietta con variazioni, but a dissolution of all things earthly into calm, ecstatic, immortal joy.

Backhaus is successful in interpreting for us on two of these planes, the human and the heroic; but I feel that the final one, which leads to the shores of Paradise, eludes him. In Op. 110 he is most exquisitely sensitive to the phrases. His enunciation of the recitative and arioso moves one almost to tears; the fugue is overwhelming in its revelation of human will-power. I found this a most moving and affecting performance and recommend it to all listeners without reservation.

The first movement of Op. 111, again, is a revelation of grandeur, and the Arietta, too, is played with a most beautiful tone that laps the listener in loving kindness - yet it is withal simple and unaffected. It is afterwards, in the variations, when the light should dissolve into one that is not of this world, that chinks of common daylight reappear to disturb us. The sense of mystery is missing. Yet do not think that this is less than a thoughtful and remarkable performance. It is just that it does not leave us — as does Op. 110 — entirely satisfied and hardly wishing to hear better. "

A.P. The Gramophone, October 1954 (Reviewing LXT2939, excerpt concerning Sonatas 31 & 32) [link]


Notes on the recordings:

Sonata No. 30 was among the earliest recorded in this series and among the few to be released on 78s alongside an LP. Nevertheless it's almost on a par with the two 1953 recordings with regard to technical quality. All three were again less than ideal, with various flaws familiar to this cycle, yet beyond a tendency to upper-frequency fuzziness and some pre- and post-echo they were generally at the higher end of the quality scale when looked at in that context. Perhaps the fact of a 78rpm issue of the first of these three works should serve as a reminder of the somewhat primitive technical origins of Backhaus's first complete cycle - by the time he returned to Beethoven sonatas in the Decca studios a few short years later, recording technology had advanced considerably.

Andrew Rose

 

 

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Wilhelm Backhaus

Biographical notes from Wikipedia

 

Wilhelm Backhaus ('Bachaus' on some record labels) (March 26, 1884 – July 5, 1969)[1] was a German pianist and pedagogue.

Born in Leipzig, Backhaus studied at the conservatoire there with Alois Reckendorf until 1899, later taking private piano lessons with Eugen d'Albert in Frankfurt. As a boy of 9 or 10 he was taken to hear both of the Brahms piano concertos performed by d'Albert — and conducted by Brahms himself. He made his first concert tour at the age of sixteen. In 1905 he won the Anton Rubinstein Competition with Béla Bartók taking second place. He toured widely throughout his life - in 1921 he gave seventeen concerts in Buenos Aires in less than three weeks. Backhaus made his U.S. debut on January 5, 1912, as soloist in Beethoven's 5th Piano Concerto with Walter Damrosch and the New York Symphony Orchestra.[1] In 1930 he moved to Lugano and became a citizen of Switzerland. He died in Villach in Austria where he was to play in a concert. His last recital a few days earlier in Ossiach was recorded.

Backhaus was particularly well known for his interpretations of Beethoven and romantic music such as that by Brahms. He was also much admired as a chamber musician. One of the reasons for his unique sound is his choice of a Bösendorfer piano for his performances and recordings, as opposed to the more common use of Steinway pianos.

 

Recordings

According to some critics,[citation needed] Backhaus was one of the first modern artists of the keyboard (see Alfred Cortot for his antithesis) and played with a clean, spare, and objective style. In spite of this analytic approach, his performances are full of feeling. One of the first pianists to leave recordings, he had a long career on the concert stage and in the studio and left us a great legacy. He recorded virtually the complete works of Beethoven and a large quantity of Mozart and Brahms, and he was also the first to record the Chopin etudes, in 1928; this is still widely regarded as one of the best recordings (Pearl 9902 and others). Backhaus plays them smoothly and softly, overcoming their technical challenges without apparent effort. A live recording from 1953 includes seven of the Études, Op. 25 and shows the changes that occurred in his playing style over the years (Aura 119). His technical command is the same, but he is more relaxed and confident and more willing to let the music speak for itself.

His January 27, 1936 recording of Brahms's Waltzes, Op. 39, runs just over thirteen minutes. His studio recordings of the complete Beethoven sonatas, made in the 1960s, display exceptional technique for a man in his seventies (Decca 433882), as do the two Brahms concertos from about the same time (Decca 433895). His live Beethoven recordings are in some ways even better, freer and more vivid (Orfeo 300921).

His chamber music recordings include Brahms's cello sonatas, with Pierre Fournier, and Franz Schubert's Trout Quintet with the International Quartet and Claude Hobday.[2]

The Times praised Backhaus in its 1969 obituary for having upheld the classical German music tradition of the Leipzig Conservatory. His phenomenal transposing powers spawned many anecdotes: finding the piano a semitone too low at a rehearsal of Grieg's A minor Concerto, he simply played in B flat minor — and then in A minor at the concert, after the instrument had been correctly tuned.[3]

Backhaus was quick to recognize the importance of the gramophone. His July 15, 1909 somewhat abridged recording of the Grieg Concerto was not only the first recording of that work, but the first time any concerto had ever been recorded. Later, on January 5, 1928, he made the first complete set of recordings of the Chopin études. At his death, Backhaus was just completing his second complete Beethoven sonata cycle. All that was missing was the Hammerklavier Sonata — when, according to the Beethoven specialist Stephen Kovacevich, Wilhelm Backhaus was the only pianist to have really understood it. (Excerpts from the book/guide to the “Great Pianists of the 20th Century”, published and © in 1998 by the Philips Music Group).


Notes from Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Backhaus

 

 

 

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