Dinu Lipatti plays Mozart Sonata No. 8 in A Minor, K.310 - studio recording
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- Опубликовано: 21 авг 2010
- Dinu Lipatti's recording from July 9, 1950 of Mozart's Sonata No. 8 in A Minor, K.310. The recording was part of Lipatti's valedictory studio recordings for EMI, made at Radio Geneve in July 1950 when the record company sent a van of equipment to record the ill pianist as he enjoyed a brief remission from the illness that would eventually kill him. This particular recording took place on a Sunday that was particularly productive in the 10 days of recordings from July 3 to 12. Lipatti had recorded the Bach Partita in the morning and would record some more Chopin waltzes in the evening after having completed this Sonata. Lipatti's dramatic emphasis and strong sense of lyricism brings tremendous pathos to this reading, which has remained a classic 60 years since it was first recorded.
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This is the best recording of this sonata I have ever heared. This is really outstanding!
Mozart and Lipatti live forever in our hearts
Troppo grande per un mondo così piccolo 🙏❤️
I know that Mozart was not a sailor, but in the section strating at 1:50, I feel like I'm on the deck of a ship...watching an unexpected storm rolling in over calm seas, foreshadowing an uncertain fate. In this performance, Lipatti makes me feel the water from rising swells...
Wow i love the slower tempo in the first movt
Why do people have to say that only one emotion or even emotions that have names to us should be how a piece of music should be interpreted by the performer. There is beauty in deep anguish, there is just plain beauty, and then there is Mozart. I think we should just all try and go on the ride Mozart takes us on. There aren't enough words to convey Mozart and so I think there is no point in trying. This is such a beautiful, soul enhancing/taking piece of music it should be just as it is. It is why it is such posed. Let it be and let it flow.
I agree. As Mendelssohn put it perfectly: the emotions expressed by the music I love are not too indefinite to be put into words, but on the contrary, too definite.
What a great musical soul he had. What a loss.
even with technology from 66 years ago, the most incredible and moving performance of sonata no 8 in la minor.
It's 6ix9ine years ago now.
He has been the best. Nobody has played the Partitas of Bach like him. Terrible loss. He left us so young!
I agree his is the best rendition of Mozart’s Sonata 8.
こんなに背骨に響くピアニストを私は他に知らない。ダイナミクスもテンポもほぼ作曲家の指定どおり。なのに、出てくる音楽は最高。
Such a nice, light touch!
this man is out of range. We have never heard this kind of quality
From the same era, William Kapell. More recently, Ivan Moravec.
In terms of virtuosity, yes. But the recording quality is sadly poor compared to nowadays...
@@OlJackBurton Ma è comunque il migliore ❤️Grande Dinu
DINU LIPATTI IS GENIUS !!!!!!!!
surely one of a kind ~
beautiful
Genial.
1. Allegro maestoso: 0:05
2. Andante cantabile con espressione: 4:13
3. Presto: 10:36
Beautiful performance! Thanks for sharing!
grazie!!!!
IMHO, the best recording of K. 310 (piano sonata no. 8 in a minor) by the great Dinu Lipatti (who died far too early)! :D
:D How FUNNY :D
*sigh*
inoubliable Lipatti.
Maravilhoso!
You should hear his last public performance of this sonata knowing that he himself had only about 3 months to live.
Tragic loss of one of the great pianists.
JD Agreed, And it is much more Dionysian than this one, oddly enough, considering he was dying at the time & could not finish the Chopin Waltzes, presumably from weakness. .
grazie
Very accurate, very beautiful. He was a great pianist and died too young.
But is beauty what this sonata is about? Should it not create a sense of deep anguish and tragedy that rips your heart out?
yes, it should !
I think so, because Mozart compose this sonata after his mother death
@Gilberto G - Not only following his mother’s death but with his father blaming him for his mother’s death.
No that is anguish
It’s about
13 minutes long. Give or take.
@mistral1975 Nothing to be add to your real sensible and sensitive comment.
Thanks for loving him as much as Dino has and will always deserve.
7:14
My liKe was the 310th one
reminds me of steve carrell in some pictures
As much as I adore Lipatti, and his wonderful versions of Mozart, I'll stay with Czifra on this one. Nevertheless a great rendition.
And we're sure this ain't Liszt playing???
FINALLY !! Legato in the left !! FINALLY !!
Why does not every pianist in the universe instinctively understand this ???
This sonata is being ruined by so many
Then Mozart ruined music, because he played it staccato, as is in the score
To start with the fact that Mozart didn't use modern piano at all - he played clavichord, harpsichord and pianoforte, not steinways.
@@reflechant Steinway didn't even produce pianos during Mozart's life 1756-91! :P But there is nothing wrong to play it on a Bechstein (as I guess Lipatti used here)! Only historic interested musician's like Harnoncourt state that Mozart should be played on "historic instruments" ...
MusikPiratCH I also think its bechstein ...
The idea here is that the legato or staccato written by Mozart wouldn't have the same duration or timbral effect as on a modern grand, and thoughtful adaptations must be made@@MusikPiratCH
plus détendu plus mélodieux qu'à Besançon...
mumu chat Oui , malheureusement .
Besançon on the other hand has an additional element! :D
A good pianist,but I don´t like.
Jorge Liebermann Why ?
Jorge Liebermann you like thelonius monk?
Vai da un'altra parte allora. Qui, solo chi ama Dinu ❤️
Dinu Lipatti tocó las Partitas de Bach como nadie lo hizo. Aquí, bellísima sonata perfecta, perfecto pedal, perfecta mano izquierda. Qué tragedia haberlos perdido tan jóvenes a Lipatti y a Mozart!