Showing posts with label luboshutz and nemenoff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label luboshutz and nemenoff. Show all posts

Friday, July 20, 2012

More from Luboshutz and Nemenoff plus....

 

Hambro and Zayde! More music for piano four hands. Yes, you all know how much I this stuff and well, I cannot resist. Luboshutz and Nemenoff on a mono Remington and Hambro and Zayde on an Enoch Light stereo special.
What I enjoy about these two records is that the artists play with the utmost taste and discretion. Nothing is thrown off slapdash for pure effect and every piece receives the serious attention to the proper style that it justly deserves. There is a little of everything here and together, a fine 75+ minutes of satisfying music making is offered.

Details in the downloads. I think there is about 10 -12 years between both these recordings.



Saturday, June 11, 2011

Luboshutz and Nemenoff perform Brahms, Schumann and More


A wonderful rescue from the trash heap here. Though the cover slipcase was waterlogged and ruined, this Camden reissue cleaned up quite nicely (once I removed pieces of cardboard that had adhered to the vinyl). The husband and wife piano duo of Pierre Luboshutz and Genia Nemenoff play Brahms, Saint Saens, Schumann and Mendelssohn.

I never tire of the Brahms' Haydn Variations in any shape or form and it was good to make the acquaintance of this record. Luboshutz and Nemenoff play in a very direct, almost willful way, but what is most stunning is the unity of interpretation. If there is a definition of harmony in marriage, I would say this performance is the musical equivalent. Listen and you will swear that this is one artist and not two, it is that cohesive. This is unsentimental playing, hardly heart on the sleeve, and the artists let the music speak for itself. I was surprised that there is little reflection at the end of each variation, one seems to march into another almost in a brusque way, though it is not to the point of annoyance or is it damaging to the structure of the piece. Again, I want to stress the unity of the presentation is what sells me here.

Very much the same approach holds forth in the Beethoven Variations of Saint Saens, the Allegro Brilliant of Mendelssohn and the Schumann Andante and Variations. The Saint Saens, in particular, is tossed off in a brilliant tour de force - it is simply a delight and reminder of what a creative, and at at his best, inspired composer Saint Saens indeed was.

I've mentioned before that I have come to really enjoy the two hand and two piano art form especially when the artists subordinate their solo will to the fine art of collaborative dialogue. Luboshutz and Nemenoff are the benchmark in this regard.

I believe that the recordings are all mid to late 40's, Camden provides no information.

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