Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0089408069222
Label: Telarc
Manufacturer: Telarc
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Telarc
Release Date: August 28, 2007
Studio: Telarc
Sales Rank: 1781
MPN: 80692
Disc 1:- Aria
- Variation 1
- Variation 2
- Variation 3 - Canone all'Unisono
- Variation 4
- Variation 5
- Variation 6 - Canone alla Seconda
- Variation 7
- Variation 8
- Variation 9 - Canone alla Terza
- Variation 10 - Fughetta
- Variation 11
- Variation 12 - Canone alla Quarta
- Variation 13
- Variation 14
- Variation 15
- Variation 16 - Canone alla Quinta
- Variation 17
- Variation 18 - Canone alla Sesta
- Variation 19
- Variation 20
- Variation 21 - Canone alla Settima
- Variation 22
- Variation 23
- Variation 24 - Canone all'Ottava
- Variation 25
- Variation 26
- Variation 27 - Canone alla Nona
- Variation 28
- Variation 29
- Variation 30 - Quodilbet
- Aria
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Editorial Review:
Album Description: Dinnerstein's Goldberg Variations was recorded in the neoclassic auditorium of the Academy of Arts and Letters in New York in March 2005. The piano she plays, a 1903 Hamburg Steinway model D concert grand, was originally owned by the town council of Hull, in Northeast England. During World War II, Hull was extensively bombed and the town hall in which the piano was housed was severely damaged. The piano, however, survived intact and was used in a series of concerts after the war to restore Hull's spirit. In 2002, it was restored by Klavierhaus in New York City, in time to be used at the re-opening of the World Trade Center's Winter Garden, playing the same role as it had in Hull over fifty years earlier.
Amazon.com: This is destined to be one of the best-remembered and significant classical releases of 2007. Simone (pronounced "See-mo-nuh") Dinnerstein has recently been attracting lots of media attention, from Oprah’s magazine to The New York Times. Within a classical-music circuit increasingly unwilling to take artistic risks, hers has been the rare success story. The 30-something pianist (a former student of Peter Serkin), backing herself, wowed critics with some notable concerts and eventually secured the support of a major label to release a self-produced recording Dinnerstein had made in March 2005. This Telarc account of the Goldberg Variations thus marks her solo debut CD (following some earlier collaborations with cellist Zuill Bailey on the Delos label). For once, the publicity is trying to keep up with the musical achievement--rather than the other way around.
Dinnerstein's seriousness of purpose is immediately obvious from her choice of the Bach masterpiece to make her mark. With the specter of Glenn Gould's own epoch-making 1955 debut playing the same work—not to mention a vast catalog of competing interpretations—Dinnerstein is nothing if not bold. But what's really extraordinary here is the liberating sense she conveys of its not having all been said before—without resorting to tiresome idiosyncrasies to stand apart from the crowd. Her remarkably deliberate way with the opening aria is unusual, to be sure. But it establishes the stakes for what will follow, where Dinnerstein's thoughtfulness and spectacular clarity seem to discover new facets at every turn. Her pianism embraces a prismatic array of touches, whether the feathery lightness of Variation 5, the burbling rhythms of Variation 14, or the tragic weight of the "black pearl" Variation 25. The cumulative effect is exhilarating, intensely moving, and an affirmation of the Goldbergs' infinite variety. --Thomas May
Average Rating: 
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Bach: Goldberg Variations. If you've ever questioned the value of owning different interpretations of the same musical work, just listen to this interpretations and compare it to that of Gould, or Landowsa, or anyone else. The artist, of course, makes a great difference. And this artist is one of the greats. Among the great interpretations of this work I find that hers resonates with me personally. This is intimate and sensitive. A Bach keyboard piece sounding romantic? That's how this interpretation strikes me. Whatever the details, it has affected the several people I have shared it with, and all agree that it is exceptional. You will think so too.
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i have to start by saying that i'm pretty sure this is my first amazon review ever. years of using amazon, years of reading reviews here. but this is the first time i've been moved to contribute a review. and it's not just because this is a wonderful recording (although it certainly is a wonderful recording). it's also to help any fellow shoppers here by balancing out the nonsense with some hopefully useful comments.
first of all, this is nothing like glenn gould. if you worship at the altar of glenn gould, it's very unlikely that you will enjoy this CD. if you think glenn gould's version of the goldberg variations is the "one true version" then you are missing the point and nothing in an amazon review can possibly persuade you ... Read More:
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....that this piece shall always remind me of the scene in "Silence of the Lambs" where Dr. Lechter is listening to the Glenn Gould recording of it in his jail cell just before all hell breaks loose. Of course, many consider the Gould version definitive; it is fabulous, but I contend that we will never hear definitive until we hear Bach play it Up Yonder. Bach's mind worked in ways that only God can comprehend...the music sometimes sounds simple, but... Then, there's the question of what instrument will Bach play it on. Discussions of Bach are endless, which gives rise to my own theory that God created him so that the writing of Heaven's music could be delegated to a mortal man....
...Which brings us to Miss Dinnerstein, and the ... Read More:
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Avoid this CD. The sound quality is downright awful. It is so painful to listen to this disk that any thoughts of a "performance" have to laid aside.
Having heard two equal CDs, I had to accept the fact that the problem was not just one "bad" disk, but a bad recording. I am dumbfounded how the label could release this trash.
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With so many great Goldberg Variations around, one can't help but wonder where the need for this album is. Don't get me wrong, it's not actually bad, but neither is it especially good. It's OK if you're a collector or are not that interested in Bach, or got this as a present, or...
However, if you're looking for a decisive version of this piece on modern piano: Go for the two versions of Glenn Gould, go for Angela Hewitt, go for the (underestimated) Andrei Gavrilov, maybe Murray Perahia's recent recording, almost any other really. The options are close to unlimited.
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