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This
time it can be reported that
Richter amassed the miraculous. Scarcely anyone had dared to hope any
longer that Richter would ever be heard in Munich again. ... But what was
most amazing and most felicitous was Richter's pianistic condition. ...The
energy of the seventy-seven year old appeared undiminished, and we
experienced one more time the entire Richter, the austere structural
fanatic of the late stylistic period, but also the old magician of
impressionistic tonal enchantment, almost believed lost. These were
historical moments.
Wolfgang Schreiber
Sueddeutsche Zeitung 5/92
Sviatoslav Richter was the patrician
interpreter of Chopin’s epic Polonaise
Fantaisie, part of a Munich concert that commemorated the death of his
close friend Marlene Dietrich. Indeed, Dietrich’s funeral had taken
place in Berlin on that very day. Richter had sent a gift of 500 roses and
the closing strains of Ravel’s La vallée des cloches peel
quietly in memoriam. This is Richter at his most introspective,
classically sublime in Haydn’s F minor Andante and Variations,
marmoreal in the fugue from Beethoven’s Op. 110 and a master of
nuance in Debussy’s L’isle joyeuse and a small Scriabin
sequence. The disc proclaims that the recital is "Out of Later
Years" (it’s one of three that are newly available in the UK),
warning us perhaps that this is not the headstrong Richter of the 1950s
and 1960s. But fiery embers still burn, far too many to enumerate in
detail, and the digital recording captures the full measure of their
warmth.
Rob Cowan
The Independent 2/2001 |