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W. A. Mozart - The Mozartean Players - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493 (1990)

Posted By: luckburz
W. A. Mozart - The Mozartean Players - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493 (1990)

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493
The Mozartean Players: Steven Lubin, Stanley Ritchie, Myron Lutzke with David Miller
EAC+LOG+CUE | FLAC: 286 MB | Artwork | 5% Recovery Info
Label/Cat#: Harmonia Mundi # HMU 907018 | Country/Year: US 1990
Genre: Classical | Style: Viennese School, Piano

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W. A. Mozart - The Mozartean Players - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493 (1990)


Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009

EAC extraction logfile from 26. December 2011, 19:16

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart / Piano Quartets

Used drive : Optiarc DVD RW AD-7243S Adapter: 6 ID: 0

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Used output format : User Defined Encoder
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TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.33 | 14:14.50 | 33 | 64132
2 | 14:15.08 | 13:21.72 | 64133 | 124279
3 | 27:37.05 | 8:29.53 | 124280 | 162507
4 | 36:06.58 | 13:48.22 | 162508 | 224629
5 | 49:55.05 | 7:17.55 | 224630 | 257459
6 | 57:12.60 | 6:57.60 | 257460 | 288794


Range status and errors

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Filename E:\CDImage.wav

Peak level 77.5 %
Range quality 99.9 %
Test CRC 6AACCFC8
Copy CRC 6AACCFC8
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [4618D914]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [5F8CA0B9]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [C7890F10]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [186C453D]
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 5) [71D5D65B]
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [01DD0708]

All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report

auCDtect: CD records authenticity detector, version 0.8.2
Copyright © 2004 Oleg Berngardt. All rights reserved.
Copyright © 2004 Alexander Djourik. All rights reserved.

Detect mode (0..40 with 0 = most accurate): 8 (default)


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[CDImage.wav]
Detected average hi-boundary frequency: 1.996196e+004 Hz
Detected average lo-boundary frequency: 1.263061e+004 Hz
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This track looks like CDDA with probability 100%.

foobar2000 1.1.14a / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2014-06-23 19:45:54

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart / Piano Quartets
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR15 -5.55 dB -25.55 dB 14:15 01-Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K.493: 1. Allegro
DR14 -6.28 dB -28.64 dB 13:22 02-Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K.493: 2. Larghetto
DR16 -4.25 dB -26.54 dB 8:30 03-Piano Quartet in E-flat major, K.493: 3. Allegretto
DR15 -2.21 dB -22.84 dB 13:48 04-Piano Quartet in g minor, K.478: 1. Allegro
DR14 -8.34 dB -27.98 dB 7:18 05-Piano Quartet in g minor, K.478: 2. Andante
DR14 -5.85 dB -24.59 dB 6:58 06-Piano Quartet in g minor, K.478: 3. Rondo
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 6
Official DR value: DR15

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 593 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================



CD Info:

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493

The Mozartean Players: Steven Lubin, Stanley Ritchie, Myron Lutzke with David Miller

Label: harmonia mundi USA
Catalog#: HMU 907018
Format: CD, Album
Country: US
Released: 1990
Genre: Classical
Style: Viennese School, Piano Quartet

Tracklist:

Quartet in E-flat Major K.493
[1] 1. Allegro 14:13
[2] 2. Larghetto 13:19
[3] 3. Allegretto 08:25
Quartet in g-minor K.478
[4] 1. Allegro 13:46
[5] 2. Andante 07:16
[6] 3. Rondo 06:58

The Mozartean Players

Steven Lubin, fortepiano
R.J. Regier 1981, d’après Anton Walter, ca. 1785

Stanley Ritchie, classical violin
Samuel Zygmuntowicz, New York 1986
(copie de Joseph Guarnerius del Gesù, 1736)

Myron Lutzke, classical cello
Francesco Gobetti, Venise, 1742

David Miller, classical viola
Matthias Albani, Bolzano, Tyrol, 1687

Recorded December 1989.

These are affectionate and musically very aware accounts of two beautiful works. Steven Lubin's piano, built by R.J. Regier after a Walter instrument (the make Mozart used) of about 1785, is— at least as captured on this recording—softer in tone and milder in attack than most fortepianos of the period that I have heard, and this helps impart an unusual warmth to the performances, which is further enhanced by the quite exceptional smoothness and sweetness, not to say the graceful phrasing, of Stanley Ritchie's playing on his period violin and the gentle resonance of Myron Lutzke's cello.

The players' readiness of response to the music is unmistakeable, and it gives rise to many felicities—in, for example, the long lines of the first movement of K493 or the alert detail in the K478 Andante. Sometimes, however, it seems to lead to performances that do not quite come fully to grips with the music, through the softening of climaxes or, perhaps particularly, the loss of momentum. Steven Lubin makes a good deal of rubato, which sometimes sounds slightly mannered and is not always done in the Mozartian way (that is, as Mozart himself specified, within a strict pulse). In the finale of K493, for example, the music doesn't often really seem to get going, and when it does it soon relaxes again; this applies especially in the dialogue passages, where Lubin's anxiety to illuminate each phrase is apt to be self-defeating. He also has a tendency to spread or roll chords to make an expressive point, more often than to some listeners might seem tasteful. There are a lot of tiny hesitations to make musical points, again perhaps more than desirable in the interest of sustaining the momentum of a movement. One senses a certain impetuosity in his playing and some want of discipline and control in his handling of rhythm from time to time.

These performances are, however, alternatives well worth considering to the Archiv Produktion disc by Malcolm Bilson and his English Baroque Soloists colleagues, the richer and better recorded of the existing versions. Bilson's tempos tend to be on the deliberate side, and these are serious, large-scale readings; the Mozartean Players' performances are more relaxed—though, I should add, not without strong and powerful things (listen for example to the development of the first movement of the G minor work). My preference remains with the Bilson version, but anyone looking for rather gentler performances, which perhaps make more of the individual, passing beauties of these works as opposed to their breadth and grandeur, will find much to enjoy in this new issue.

– Stanley Sadie, Gramophone [3/1991]

Review by Blair Sanderson

Comparatively rare among chamber combinations and seldom handled with ease by composers, the piano quartet's lopsided format presents difficulties that piano trios and quintets, with their tested stability, do not. The small repertoire of works by Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Brahms, Schumann, and Dvorák shows that this was a genre of limited interest, considerable frustration, and mixed results. Mozart's two piano quartets, however, are held as exemplars, for his solutions to the ensemble's unique problems of balance and cohesion are convincing and elegant. The players' roles shift constantly, each taking turns as the dominant part; the counterpoint is consistent and inventive, always maintaining a tension that interlocks the trio with the piano; and the pieces are as strongly characterized and richly developed as any of Mozart's other great chamber works. The Mozartean Players perform on pianoforte and period string instruments, and their tuning is a little lower than one hears on modern instruments. However, this lends warmth to the Piano Quartet No. 2 in E flat and a deeper sense of pathos to the Piano Quartet No. 1 in G minor. Both pieces are skillfully played, with a conversational tone appropriate to Mozart's intentions. Classical Express provides exceptional sound and the budget price is hard to beat. allmusicguide
W. A. Mozart - The Mozartean Players - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493 (1990)

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W. A. Mozart - The Mozartean Players - Piano Quartets K.478 & K.493 (1990)


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