The Presto from the Moonlight is to my ears very inadequate on this fortepiano, when compared with a modern piano. The instrument simply hasn't got the tonal strength to project a full bodied version of this magnificent music, so that when it is 'forte' it is often making clattery noise and not music. Also I find the interpretation lacking - the retards in the first half and the middle of the movement sound hammy and foppish. Also the player sounds as if the speed of the movement is a little too much for him and his hands and fingers are cramping. Perhaps it is the instrument and not the musician which is giving this impression.
To put this performance up against a classic such as the great Rudolf Serkin performance on the modern piano I listened to for years, could not even be seriously considered, to my mind. I only own this on LP so unfortunately cannot put it up for comparison on the web.
I think the sound of the fortepiano is also lacking in the other three movements, expecially in the first movement of the Moonlight. But curiously enough that one is strangely moving, more so that in other performances I've heard in the last few years. I would put that down to the talent of the performer and not the instrument. As even a Greek sculpture without its nose and arms can be moving.
I read on another board recently that Beethoven was always asking his piano makers to make better, fuller, richer instruments, and I can now see why.
[This message has been edited by Chaszz (edited February 11, 2004).]
To put this performance up against a classic such as the great Rudolf Serkin performance on the modern piano I listened to for years, could not even be seriously considered, to my mind. I only own this on LP so unfortunately cannot put it up for comparison on the web.
I think the sound of the fortepiano is also lacking in the other three movements, expecially in the first movement of the Moonlight. But curiously enough that one is strangely moving, more so that in other performances I've heard in the last few years. I would put that down to the talent of the performer and not the instrument. As even a Greek sculpture without its nose and arms can be moving.
I read on another board recently that Beethoven was always asking his piano makers to make better, fuller, richer instruments, and I can now see why.
[This message has been edited by Chaszz (edited February 11, 2004).]
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