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Roscoe: Beethoven – Piano Sonatas vol.2 (FLAC)

Roscoe: Beethoven - Piano Sonatas vol.2 (FLAC)
Roscoe: Beethoven – Piano Sonatas vol.2 (FLAC)

Composer: Ludwig van Beethoven
Performer: Martin Roscoe
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Deux-Elles
Catalogue: DXL1162
Release: 2011
Size: 239 MB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: cover

Piano Sonata in E-Flat Major, Op. 7
01. I. Allegro molto e con brio
02. II. Largo con gran espressione
03. III. Allegro
04. IV. Rondo. Poco Allegretto e Grazioso

Piano Sonata in G Minor, Op. 49, No. 1
05. I. Andante
06. II. Rondo. Allegro

Piano Sonata in G Major, Op. 49, No. 2
07. I. Allegro ma non troppo
08. II. Tempo di Menuetto

Piano Sonata in C Major, Op. 53 ‘Waldstein’
09. I. Allegro con brio
10. II. Introduzione. Adagio molto
11. III. Rondo. Allegretto moderato

One of Britain’s most prolific recitalists, Martin Roscoe presents the much anticipated second volume from his Complete Beethoven Series of the new Barry Cooper edition.

Martin Roscoe is a versatile musician who endeavours always to serve the composer and the music. His enduring popularity and solid reputation are built on a deeply thoughtful musicianship that is allied to an easy rapport with audiences and fellow musicians alike.

We are delighted to present Volume Two from his complete Beethoven piano sonata series, of which Roscoe describes these works as “ the most searching, the most challenging and the most fulfilling of all composers.”

This album is part of a complete cycle of Beethoven sonatas by British pianist Martin Roscoe, who approaches the sonatas not chronologically but in unique groupings with one famous work per album as a centerpiece. It is grouped with another work or works that have something to do with it, and then smaller pieces may be added as a kind of intermezzo. Here the centerpiece is the Piano Sonata No. 21 in C major, Op. 53 (“Waldstein”), and the album bears the subtitle “Waldstein.” The subsidiary attraction is the Piano Sonata No. 4 in E flat major, Op. 7, dubbed the “Grand Sonata,” and the first to definitively break free of the Haydn sonata pattern. In these two large, virtuoso works, Roscoe cultivates an almost preternatural cleanness and smoothness, putting on a display of true keyboard mastery. Distant indeed are heroic treatments of Beethoven, even in the clattering octaves of the “Waldstein”; the theme of the finale remains lyrically luminous even as the double-octave runs begin. Perhaps the most attractive feature of the album is the inclusion of the two short sonatas of Op. 49, early works despite their middling opus numbers. Beethoven plainly became intrigued by these little pieces and allowed them to be published even as he ignored numerous other works from around the same time. In a perfectly balanced performance such as Roscoe gives here, they are almost hypnotic. The acoustics of Suffolk’s famed Potton Hall are marvelously well suited to Roscoe’s quietly luminous efforts here, representative of the superb state of British pianism in the early 21st century.

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