Beethoven's Piano Sonatas

Started by George, July 21, 2007, 07:27:17 PM

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SonicMan46

Quote from: George on August 31, 2024, 04:17:57 PMDid you download this set or manage to get a physical copy? Looks like no physical copies are even listed on amazon.

Minsoo Sohn - how can this be heard, downloaded, streamed or other? Website HERE offers Spotify DL but does not work for me.  Quoted below are Todd's Recommendations - a few year ago, Fischer et al were at the tops, but in '24, Sohn & Lucchesini replace them - now I've listened to the Italian twice on Spotify but cannot stand the applause after each work - However, had not heard Sohn - does anyone have a solution - this is listed as on Sony on the website linked, why is it not available as a streamer, DL, or physical media?  Thanks - Dave

QuoteTop Tier – The Holy Tetrarchy - 2023
Annie Fischer (Hungarton)
Friedrich Gulda (Amadeo)
Wilhelm Kempff (DG, mono)
Wilhelm Backhaus (mono)

The Top Ten – in order, as determined by Science! - 2024
Minsoo Sohn
Andrea Lucchesini
Annie Fischer
Daniel-Ben Pienaar
Irina Mejoueva (Bijin)
Artur Schnabel
Russell Sherman
Wilhelm Kempff (DG, mono)
Yu Kosuge
Eric Heidsieck




Todd

The Sohn cycle appears to have been pulled from all commercial streaming sites, and as far as I can tell it was not released in physical form, at least outside the Korean market.  That's common for Korean market releases.  It may be available on torrent sites.
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

lordlance

It's somewhat amusing (to me) that despite being twenty years older than the Brautigam cycle, Badura-Skoda's fortepiano sounds much better and less - you'll have to excuse me if this is too technical for some of you - clanky.    ;)

If you are interested in listening to orchestrations of solo/chamber music, you might be interested in this thread.
Also looking for recommendations on neglected conductors thread.

Todd

Eight more cycles down, which can only mean it's time to refresh The One True List:


The Top Ten – in order, as determined by Science!
Minsoo Sohn
Andrea Lucchesini
Annie Fischer
Daniel-Ben Pienaar
Irina Mejoueva (Bijin)
Artur Schnabel
Russell Sherman
Wilhelm Kempff (DG, mono)
Yu Kosuge
Eric Heidsieck

[Rudolf Serkin & Sviatoslav Richter; OK, they didn't complete a cycle, but this is where they belong]


Second Tier - Cycles 11-20 (in alphabetical order)
Francois Frederic Guy
Friedrich Gulda (Amadeo)
Kazune Shimizu (Sony)
Paul Badura-Skoda (JVC/Astree)
Robert Riefling
Takahiro Sonoda (Evica)
Wilhelm Backhaus (mono)
Wilhelm Backhaus (stereo)
Wilhelm Kempff (DG, stereo)
Yusuke Kikuchi


Second Tier - Remainder (in alphabetical order)
Bernard Roberts II
Claude Frank
Daniel Barenboim (EMI, 2005)
Eduardo del Pueyo
Emil Gilels
Fazil Say
Friedrich Gulda (Orfeo)
Hie-Yon Choi
Maurizio Pollini
Maurizio Zaccaria
Michael Levinas
Peter Takacs
Robert Silverman
Rudolf Buchbinder (Unitel)
Seymour Lipkin
Takahiro Sonoda (Denon)
Tamami Honma
Younwha Lee

[Bruce Hungerford; OK, he didn't complete a cycle, but this is where he belongs]


Third Tier (in alphabetical order)
Aquiles Delle Vigne
Abdel Rahman El Bacha (Mirare)
Akiyoshi Sako
Alfred Brendel (Philips, 1970s)
Alfred Brendel (Vox)
Alfredo Perl (Arte Nova)
Andras Schiff
Boris Giltburg
Claudio Arrau (1960s)
Claudio Arrau (1980s)
Craig Sheppard
Daniel Barenboim (EuroArts, 1983/84)
Daniel Barenboim (DG)
Daniel Barenboim (EMI, 1960s)
David Allen Wehr
Dieter Zechlin
Friedrich Gulda (Decca)
Garrick Ohlsson
Gerard Willems
Gerhard Oppitz
Ian Hobson
Ichiro Nodaira
Igor Levit
Irina Mejoueva (Waka)
James Brawn
Jingge Yan
John O'Conor
Jonathan Biss
Konstantin Scherbakov
Kun-Woo Paik
Louie Lortie
Malcolm Bilson, et al (Beghin is second tier)
Malcolm Binns
Martin Roscoe
Massimiliano Damerini
Michael Houstoun (Morrison Trust)
Michael Houstoun (Rattle)
Michael Korstick
Muriel Chemin
Paul Badura-Skoda (Gramola)
Pavaali Jumppanen
Peter Rösel
Robert Silverman (AudioHigh)
Rudolf Buchbinder (Teldec)
Saleem Abboud Ashkar
Sequeira Costa
Stephen Kovacevich
Stewart Goodyear
Walter Gieseking (EMI/Tahra hybrid)
Wilhelm Kempff (1961, King International)
Yaeko Yamane
Yurina Tetsu
Yves Nat


Fourth Tier (in alphabetical order)
Abdel Rahman El Bacha (Forlane)
Aldo Ciccolini
Alfred Brendel (Philips, 1990s)
Andre De Groote
Angela Hewitt
Anton Kuerti
Christian Leotta
Daniel Barenboim (DG, 2020)
Dino Ciani
Georges Pludermacher
Giovanni Bellucci
Idil Biret
Ikuyo Nakamichi
Jean Bernard Pommier
Jean Muller
Jean-Efflam Bavouzet
Jeno Jando
John Kane
John Lill
Konstantin Lifschitz
Llŷr Williams
Mari Kodama
Maria Grinburg
Martin Rasch
Martino Tirimo   
Melodie Zhao
Mikhail Lidsky
Paul Lewis
Richard Goode
Robert Benz
Robert Taub
Ronald Brautigam
Rudolf Buchbinder (RCA)
Sebastian Forster
Steven Herbert Smith
Steven Masi
Timothy Ehlen
Vladimir Ashkenazy
Yukio Yokoyama


Near Bottom Tier (in sorta particular order)
HJ Lim
Rita Bouboulidi
Tatiana Nikolayeva
Anne Oland
Mordecai Shehori


Eighth Circle of Hell
[Glenn Gould; OK, he didn't complete a cycle, but this is where he belongs]


Crime Against Humanity
Riccardo Schwartz
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

Todd

And here's how the tiers break down in visual form:
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

Todd

I just did a quick, mini-rabbit hole thing regarding available Beethoven piano sonata cycles, and it turns out that Grok cites me as a primary resource on the topic.  That is a problem.

It is worth noting that neither Grok, nor Gemini, nor Copilot got the number right, with Copilot way off, and Grok by far the closest.

The results did not instill confidence in AI output. 
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

San Antone

Quote from: Todd on October 07, 2025, 07:49:06 AMI just did a quick, mini-rabbit hole thing regarding available Beethoven piano sonata cycles, and it turns out that Grok cites me as a primary resource on the topic.  That is a problem.

It is worth noting that neither Grok, nor Gemini, nor Copilot got the number right, with Copilot way off, and Grok by far the closest.

The results did not instill confidence in AI output. 

It seems AI has the same problem some members on GMG have, i.e. unable to discern the humor in the hyperbolic claim of "the only scientific ranking in history."

Todd

Quote from: San Antone on October 07, 2025, 09:18:52 AMIt seems AI has the same problem some members on GMG have, i.e. unable to discern the humor in the hyperbolic claim of "the only scientific ranking in history."

Grok referenced other posts/contributions of mine on other forums and sites, not GMG, which it did not list among its sources.  There is no doubt LLMs have difficulty with hyperbole and irony.
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

prémont

Quote from: Todd on October 07, 2025, 11:17:52 AMContradictory how?

I assume that the purpose of making a ranking is to give others an idea of what is worth listening to and what is not. Therefore, the ranking becomes contradictory and not indicative if it cannot be taken at face value, even if you claim a scientific approach to the subject.
Reality trumps our fantasy far beyond imagination.

Todd

Quote from: prémont on October 07, 2025, 12:01:09 PMeven if you claim a scientific approach to the subject.

LOL.  No such claim was seriously made.  The list is for fun, for my purposes, and that's it.  Your interpretation perfectly illustrates a pitfall of self-serious intellectualism.
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

hopefullytrusting

Quote from: prémont on October 07, 2025, 12:01:09 PMI assume that the purpose of making a ranking is to give others an idea of what is worth listening to and what is not. Therefore, the ranking becomes contradictory and not indicative if it cannot be taken at face value, even if you claim a scientific approach to the subject.

Maybe, I'm too simple, but that is how I have always taken the tier system. Like the top tier is what @Todd would recommend and/or suggest to someone who was interested in getting a set of Beethoven's Piano Sonatas. Now, I know he is wrong because my favorite Beethoven set - Goodyear - is in the fat part of his bell curve! :o

Todd

Quote from: hopefullytrusting on October 07, 2025, 12:41:46 PMNow, I know he is wrong because my favorite Beethoven set - Goodyear - is in the fat part of his bell curve! :o

The empirical evidence, scientifically considered, shows that Mr Goodyear, while delivering some notable highlights, and splendid playing (eg, in the opening Allegro of 106), falls within the third tier.  It is all quite irrefutable. 
The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

hopefullytrusting

Quote from: Todd on October 07, 2025, 12:56:00 PMThe empirical evidence, scientifically considered, shows that Mr Goodyear, while delivering some notable highlights, and splendid playing (eg, in the opening Allegro of 106), falls within the third tier.  It is all quite irrefutable. 

Ahem, in academic parlance this is a classic case of the replication crisis. >:D

Todd

Quote from: hopefullytrusting on October 07, 2025, 01:01:30 PMAhem, in academic parlance this is a classic case of the replication crisis. >:D

The universe is change; life is opinion. - Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

People would rather believe than know - E.O. Wilson

Propaganda death ensemble - Tom Araya

prémont

#5194
Quote from: hopefullytrusting on October 07, 2025, 12:41:46 PMMaybe, I'm too simple, but that is how I have always taken the tier system. Like the top tier is what @Todd would recommend and/or suggest to someone who was interested in getting a set of Beethoven's Piano Sonatas. Now, I know he is wrong because my favorite Beethoven set - Goodyear - is in the fat part of his bell curve! :o

Don't worry. A large number of my favorites fall into Todd's third tier (Arrau, Jingge Jan, Barenboim, Lortie, Goodyear, and more), and several of Todd's first tiers do very little for me (Pienaar, Kosuge, Sohn).
Reality trumps our fantasy far beyond imagination.

Spotted Horses

Quote from: prémont on October 07, 2025, 01:32:01 PMDon't worry. A large number of my favorites fall into Todd's third tier (Arrau, Jingge Jan, Barenboim, Lortie, Goodyear, and more), and several of Todd's first tiers do very little for me (Pienaar, Kosuge, Sohn).

Finally, someone else who likes Lortie!
Formerly Scarpia (Scarps), Baron Scarpia, Ghost of Baron Scarpia, Varner, Ratliff, Parsifal, perhaps others.

hopefullytrusting

Quote from: Spotted Horses on October 07, 2025, 11:01:12 PMFinally, someone else who likes Lortie!

I love Lortie as well; it is so clean and clear. Lortie actually did my favorite Mozart Piano Concertos as well, for the exact same reason. In fact, I've loved everything I've hard from Lortie - they are very consistent, and I dig that, and I also understand, empirically, that consistently is in the belly of the bell curve. 8)

Spotted Horses

Quote from: hopefullytrusting on October 07, 2025, 11:05:52 PMI love Lortie as well; it is so clean and clear. Lortie actually did my favorite Mozart Piano Concertos as well, for the exact same reason. In fact, I've loved everything I've hard from Lortie - they are very consistent, and I dig that, and I also understand, empirically, that consistently is in the belly of the bell curve. 8)

I particularly like his recordings of the Lutoslawski Piano Concerto and Szymanowski Symphony No 4.
Formerly Scarpia (Scarps), Baron Scarpia, Ghost of Baron Scarpia, Varner, Ratliff, Parsifal, perhaps others.

ritter

Quote from: San Antone on October 08, 2025, 02:56:01 AMThis thread's topic is Beethoven Piano sonatas.  I for one enjoy reading Todd's posts, and find this kind of personal off-topic discussion much more damaging to the forum than anything Todd has contributed.


Thanks for this post, San Antone. You have found the right words for a situation that is very concerning to us moderators.

I ask members that, if they have scores to settle with each other, they do so privately.

 « Et n'oubliez pas que le trombone est à Voltaire ce que l'optimisme est à la percussion. » 

hopefullytrusting

Quote from: San Antone on October 08, 2025, 02:56:01 AMThis thread's topic is Beethoven Piano sonatas.  I for one enjoy reading Todd's posts, and find this kind of personal off-topic discussion much more damaging to the forum than anything Todd has contributed.



Unironically, especially from an archival point of view, @Todd - whether he likes it or not - has performed a great service, especially given how weak the major generative ai platforms are at collecting data, especially data pre-Web 2.0. We need more niche scholars, as this kind of knowledge would be lost without such dedication - @Gurn Blanston - I believe - did something similar with Haydn.