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Eduardo del Pueyo: The Complete Philips Recordings | Australian Eloquence ELQ4840193

Eduardo del Pueyo: The Complete Philips Recordings

£20.88

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Label: Australian Eloquence

Cat No: ELQ4840193

Barcode: 0028948401932

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 5

Genre: Instrumental

Release Date: 15th February 2019

Contents

About

A newly remastered, richly documented set celebrating the art of a Spanish Beethoven specialist recorded at the peak of his powers in the late 1950s, some of it released onto CD for the first time.

Born in Zaragoza in 1905, Eduardo del Pueyo left Spain in 1920 to enter the Paris Conservatoire, but rejected the teaching of Marguerite Long outright. In thrall to Beethoven’s genius in particular, he chose instead to become, as it were, a great-grand pupil of Franz Liszt through the example of Marie Jaëll, as passed down to Jeanne Bosch van’s Gravemoer. His playing is based on absolute respect for the musical text, shorn of false pathos but all the more sensitively expressive because the expressions flows from a lucid musical line.

Del Pueyo brought freshly reconsidered cycles of the Beethoven sonatas to audiences across Europe in the late 1930s, and audiences (especially in Germany) thrilled to a Beethoven for their time, where everything was audible, and whose steely rigour set the composer free from sentimentality, much as Erdmann and Schnabel were doing in their own ways.

Del Pueyo recorded a complete Beethoven cycle much later in his career, but these Philips recordings of ten sonatas, mastered from the original tapes for CD, date from 1958 when, having settled in Brussels, he followed up naturally idiomatic accounts of Falla and Granados with an abortive cycle, beginning at the summit with the ‘Hammerklavier’. The urgency with which he launches into the imperious chords at the opening are a good indication of where radical playing immediately places the listener: this is Beethoven playing that really counts for something.

Del Pueyo closed his Philips contract in 1960 with Franck and Bach: a poised, radiant and simple account of the Italian Concerto, and a First Partita concluding with a remarkable account of the Gigue where he barely seems to touch the keyboard. It sets the seal on another piano release of exceptional historical significance from Eloquence.

‘Del Pueyo plays Nights in the Gardens of Spain with exceptional feeling for the style.’ - High Fidelity, March 1957

‘[The Danzas espanolas] are played extremely well by del Pueyo, who appears to be a fine technician and a thoughtful stylist.’ - High Fidelity, March 1958

‘I found myself thoroughly interested in his version of the “Hammerklavier” even though I did not always agree with his view of it ... he plays the “Les Adieux” Sonata most beautifully.’
- Gramophone, November 1959

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