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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
a total disaster,
By theb0x (massachusetts) - See all my reviews
This review is from: David Helfgott Plays Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3; Four Preludes; Sonata No. 2 (Audio CD)
i'll make this brief because it's all pretty much been said and i don't want to pile on...
the movie shine, which i thought was quite well done (although horribly unfair to david's father), inspired me to check out david helfgott's works. thank god i borrowed this from my library instead of wasting any money (yes, i know it's being sold for .01 here) purchasing it. this poor man is not fit to record hot cross buns, let alone the immeasurably deep and difficult rach3. i haven't heard any of helfgott's other performances, and after hearing this, i pray to god that i never will. this album is simply a disaster. if you're looking for helfgott, i don't know what to tell you. perhaps his other recordings are not so bad? i can't imagine them being good by any stretch, but this HAS to be as bad as it gets. if you're looking for rachmaninov's piano concerto no. 3, then i recommend martha argerich's philips release with the berlin radio symphony orchestra, riccardo chailly conducting. a unique performance that unlike helfgott's "unique" performance, is simply a joy to listen to. if you're looking for what many (myself included) consider the perfect example of this masterpiece, go with vladimir horowitz's performance with the new york philharmonic symphony orchestra, sir john barbirolli conducting. this is as good as it gets and even rachmaninov said that horowitz played it better than himself. this recording is often called "the rachminanov third to end all rachmaninov thirds". actually, just get any rach3 but this one. please. ok, that wasn't so brief... but this exploitation of a sick, perhaps at one point talented, man fills me with anger.
81 of 104 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Sad performances from a sad (and now seemingly gone from the stage) performer,
By John Grabowski (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: David Helfgott Plays Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3; Four Preludes; Sonata No. 2 (Audio CD)
It's truly sad the number of people here who say they never tried classical music before, but were "turned on" by the Shine movie and this recording. Really great artists are releasing brilliant recordings into the vacuum of public notice every day, and something like this piece of garbage comes along and is hoisted to Classical's Top Ten. All because the people who are weeping over Helfgott and his semi-autobigraphical yarn have never heard classical music before, as they even state in their reviews, but feel compelled, after one listen to one piece by one pianist, to tell the world what a "genius" he is. If they would go out and buy a second CD, one by an artist and not a sideshow talent, they wouldn't be "amazed" and "moved" by this recording, which is not even "amateurish," as someone described it. (An amateur is merely someone who isn't paid money; Mr Helfgott was paid money, and amateurs can play rings around him. He plays passages with utter brittleness, is all over the place with dynamics, and doesn't seem to have a sense of what the music is about--ie, how to build coherently, how to highlight the architecture of the works. To make things worse, often he can't keep up with the orchestra--and the orchestra itself is not very good, by the way. In the Rachmaninoff Sonata he falls apart and simply cannot play the notes. Listen to Zoltán Kocsis if you want a jaw-dropping performance of this work. In fact, just listen to Helfgott's three samples here, and then go to Kocsis' CD of the same work and listen to his samples of almost the same segments. The difference should immediately silence any debate as to whether Helfgott can even competently play the material.
A third year Julliard or Curtis student couldn't get a passing grade turning in a performance like this, let alone a record contract and sold-out performances at Carnegie.) Shame on Gillian Helfgott, David's exploitative partner in this crime. Shame on the producers, both movie and record, for claiming Shine is the story of a destroyed virtuoso who comes back in triumph. The real life story not quite as tremendous, and Helfgott was nothing extraordinary before his breakdown, nor was his repertoire choice of the "Rach 3" all that daring for a young pianist: many of them cut their teeth on it every year. But mostly shame on the public, for being so woefully musically ignorant that they do not notice complete musical incompetence when they hear it. When Helfgott performed in New York's Carnegie Hall during his "comeback" tour, Isaac Stern was among those in the audience. At intermission he was seen hastily leaving. A newspaper music reviewer shouted to him, asking what he thought of the performance. "No comment" was his only reply. No stars for this, although Amazon's software forced me to put in one.
23 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
It doesn't get much worse than this,
By
This review is from: David Helfgott Plays Rachmaninov: Piano Concerto No. 3; Four Preludes; Sonata No. 2 (Audio CD)
This is the worst recording of the Rachamninoff Third Concerto I have ever heard (and I have heard about 25 of them.) The most charitable adjectives I can summon for this performance are hazy amd heavily medicated. I have nothing but sympathy for the trials Mr. Helfgott has had to endure, but I have even even greater sympathy for far more talented musicians who are trying to break into this difficult profession--only to have their hard work usurped by a cinematic sob story. If you want to hear a great Rachmaninoff Third, try Horowitz/Ormandy, Horowitz/Reiner, or Rachmaninoff/Ormandy. Helfgott plays the revised version of the Rachmaninoff Second Sonata. If this is the version you prefer, I suggest Thibaudet's fine performance on Decca. Personally, I feel that the revised version is too condensed (Rachmaninoff felt this way also, and allowed Vladimir Horowitz to create a combination of the original and revised versions). Both the 1968 Sony (lithe, pantherlike, and in excellent sound) and the 1980 RCA (brooding, with closely miked sound) Horowitz versions are my top picks for this work. Helfgott's 15 minutes are over, let's just let these unfortunate recordings rest in peace.
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