I'm very puzzled by the fact that many recordings of Piano Sonata No 28, Op. 101, divide the final part into two separate tracks. This part consists of a Langsam und sehnsuchtsvoll introduction, then a brief repeat of the opening theme of the first movement, followed immediately by a trill which leads without a break into the Allegro finale. But many recordings introduce a break by putting the first two parts on one track and the Allegro fonale on another. These include recordings by Arrau, Fischer, Gilels, Kempff, Lortie, Schnabel and Solomon. Recordings by Brendel, Gulda and Paul Lewis put everything on one track, so that the trill is not annoyingly and absurdly interrupted. I wonder if anyone else has noticed this.
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Recordings of Op 101
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Recordings of Op. 101
There is a break on all these CDs, and I don't think there's anything weird about my CD player: I'm using RealPlayer on a PC. I've removed the break by joining the tracks using an MP3 editor. I'd like to know if anyone else has noticed the interruption, e.g. on the DG CD by Kempff (453 111-2)
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Originally posted by rhs View PostMany thanks. No interruotion when played through Media Player, though I've had other problems with this. Is there any non-flaky software for playing CDs through a PC - more precisely for playing CD tracks saved to a HD?
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Originally posted by Chris View PostRealPlayer is some pretty ridiculous software, actually. Try it in a regular CD player, portable, in a car, whatever, and I bet you won't get any interruption.
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Originally posted by rhs View PostYou're right, Chris: no break when I play the Arrau, Gilels, Kempff, Schnabel and Solomon CDs on a CD player. But there's still a break with the Fischer and Lortie CDs, which I burned from MP3 files downloaded from classicsonline.com. So I suspect that the break is introduced when the CD tracks are saved on to my Hard Disk in MP3 format. I just tried saving Gilels using iTunes, and got no break: but the tracks were saved in AAC audio format, so maybe MP3 is the culprit. I'll have a look at VLC, Sorrano: it certainly LOOKS better than other players.
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Originally posted by Chris View PostNo, it's the burning software. There is almost always an option on burners to insert track breaks between the mp3s. You just have to find that option and turn it off.
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Yes, that is also possible. Frankly, I haven't heard of anyone using Real Player for like 10 years. I'd just stick with Windows Media Player. Or download the Combined Community Codec Pack and use Media Player Classic. That's a great simple, light-weight package that comes with all the video and audio codecs you could ever need.
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