Discography





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           Artek Recordings - AR-0023-2

         Anton Nel: Piano Recital
.

         Mozart, Sibelius, Granados, Debussy, Schubert ("Wanderer" Fantasy)

        
Since his first-place victory in the 1987 International Naumburg Competition, pianist Anton Nel has maintained a busy career divided between performing and teaching, and he appears to be playing as wonderfully as ever. The virile demeanor, forceful articulation, and subtle rubatos Nel brings to Mozart's A major sonata freshen up this overplayed staple with little trace of self-consciousness. A strong sense of projection and robust lyricism similarly inform Sibelius' D-flat Romance, a work that often comes off sounding flaccid and inconsequential. Nel's vivacious, idiomatic account of Granados' Allegro de Concierto does full justice to the composer's slithering syntax and meaty textures. And if you like your Debussy sinewy and linear rather than tinted and misty, Nel's Estampes certainly will please you with its strong left-hand underpinnings in the outer pieces and hotheaded central climax in La Soirée dans Grenade. Throughout Schubert's Wanderer Fantasy there's much to savor in Nel's crisp and clean pianism. I especially like his terse, headlong, and sparely pedaled treatment of the Adagio, and how his light touch keeps the difficult Allegro airborne and unclotted. In sum, this is a solid and stimulating release from a pianist who records all too little.
 [Jed Distler, ClassicsToday.com]


         



ESS.AY Recordings CD1094


The French Confection

Franck: Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra
Faure: Ballade for Piano and Orchestra
with the Philharmonia Virtuosi, Richard Kapp conducting (live recordings)


This recording was released as part of the legacy of the late Richard Kapp, a wonderful musician with
 whom I performed countless times over a fifteen year period.



 

Artek Recordings - AR-0025-2


Anton Nel and Bion Tsang: Beethoven Sonatas and Variations for Piano and Cello

(recorded live at Jordan Hall in Boston)


Up till I heard this two-CD set of the complete works of Beethoven for cello and piano my favorite set had been that of the Emerson Quartet's David Finckel and his wife pianist Wu Han. But I'm completely captivated by this new release by a cellist I'd never heard of before, Bion Tsang. He is a young Chinese-American (born in Michigan in 1968) who made his debut with the New York Philharmonic at age 11 under Zubin Mehta. At a very young age he became a professor of cello at the University of Texas while continuing his concert career. It is amazing to me, frankly, that I'd not heard of him before. Perhaps that's because I'm not a cellist who is plugged into news of rising stars. Be that as it may, I find here the playing of a real master, with technique to spare (and Lord knows there's plenty of virtuosic demand in this Beethoven sonatas especially, oddly enough, the earliest two, the Op. 5 sonatas which were written for the reigning cello virtuoso of Beethoven's day, Jean-Louis Duport) as well as mature musicianship. He has the ability to subtly emphasize the important musical content while maintaining forward motion so that there is a sense of 'this is wonderful, I wonder what's next?'. This is true as well in the slow movements, such as the slow introduction to the Op. 5, No. 2. My favorite of these sonatas is the Op. 69 in A Major. It has some of Beethoven's most compelling musical argument coupled with meltingly beautiful themes. Tsang makes the most of this and actually outsings Finckel or even Yo-Yo Ma or Mstislav Rostropovich, good as they are. Obviously, his performances face stiff competition -- every cellist worth his salt has recorded them: e.g., Casals, Rose, Starker, du Pre and Tortelier. His accompanist -- and that's a misnomer, actually, since the piano parts for these works are of equal importance to those for the cellist -- is the too-little-known Anton Nel, Tsang's University of Texas colleague. I raved about a solo album by Nel (Mozart, Sibelius, Granados, Schubert, Debussy) also on the Artek label just a few months ago. He, too, faces strong competition (Richter with Rostropovich, for instance) and acquits himself with highest honor. His playing is sensitive to the rubati of the cellist and his phrasing as well as dynamic and rhythmic subtlety are a wonder to hear. Add to this that these are live performances, recorded at Jordan Hall, Boston in 2005 and there is the additional frisson that comes from that.
Also included are the three sets of variations Beethoven wrote for cello and piano -- one based on a theme from Handel's 'Judas Maccabaeus', and two arias from 'The Magic Flute' ('Bei Maennern' and 'Ein Maedchen oder Weibchen') -- and they, too, are given excellent performances.
I do not hesitate at all to recommend this issue strongly.
J. Scott Morrission [Amazon.com 5 star review]



 


EMI ClassicsCDELJ(WCM) 126

 
Anton Nel – Piano Recital

Works by Beethoven, Ginastera (Sonata No. 1), Chopin, Schumann-Liszt

 

 


Musicmasters Classics 670832-2


Saint-Saens: Piano Works



     "A beautifully played collection."  [Musical Heritage Review]


 

Musicmasters 7023-2-C
  
Haydn: Piano Sonatas
(Hob XVI: No. 31 in B Minor, No. 32 in E-Major, No. 46 in A-flat, and No. 52 in E-flat)


        " A remarkable tour de force"  [Fanfare Magazine]




                              Virgin Classics CUV 5 611372 PM 516


Saint-Saens: Carnival of the Animals

With Keith Snell, piano, Academy of London conducted by Richard Stamp



"There is surely no more entertaining version of the Carnival of the Animals available" [Gramophone Magazine]
One of Gramophone's Critic's Choices




Bridge Records BCD 9027A and B


Joaquin Rodrigo: Complete Music for Piano

(with Gregory Allen)


    "Impeccable performances." [New York Times]





Crystal Records CD654


Bach and Noodles

(with Harvey Pittel, saxophone)

Works by Bach, Rimsky-Korsakoff, Dorsey, Del Tredici, and others


 



Danacord DACOCD471


“Il Convegno”: Chamber Music by Almicare Ponchielli

 

 



ESS.AY Recordings CD1042


“Tea Time”: Favorites for Violin and Piano

(with Mela Tenenbaum)

Works by Chopin, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, Brahms, and others

 



Bridge Records BCD9047

Stephen Jaffe: Double Sonata
(with Barry Snyder, piano)

 




Paul Hindemith: Sonatas

 

            For Brass Instruments and Piano
            (with various artists)

            Equilibrium ECD 10

 

            For String Instruments and Piano
            (with various artists)

            Equilibrium ECD 11

 

            For Woodwind Instruments and Piano
            (with various artists)

            Equilibrium ECD 9

 



Gasparo Records GSCD 28


David Liptak: Songs and Night Scenes

(with various artists)

  

 

Various live performances from Symphony Concerts, Chamber Music Festivals, and Recitals available by request from the artist.





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