Product Details
Son In B Min/Mephisto Waltz 1

Son In B Min/Mephisto Waltz 1
From Reference Recordings

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Track Listing

  1. Mephisto Waltz #1
  2. La Campanella
  3. Harmonies du soir
  4. Feux Follets
  5. Sonta in b

Product Details

  • Released on: 2003-09-16
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds
  • Running time: 59 minutes

Customer Reviews

Heroic Pianism5
This is an extraordinary recording. Nojima may well be the finest pianist most people have never heard of. Minoru Nojima was a child prodigy in Japan, won a major nationwide competition there as a teenager, studied with Lev Oborin in Moscow and then with Constance Keene and Abram Chasins in New York, and burst upon the international music scene as a winner of the Van Cliburn piano competition in 1969. Although known and highly respected amongst pianists as a "pianist's pianist," he is not well known to most music lovers, largely because he doesn't like to make recordings and has made extremely few. This technically superb, rich-sounding digital recording was made in 1986 by Keith Johnson in the Civic Auditorium of Oxnard, California, for the San-Francisco-based audiophile label Reference Recordings; Nojima plays a tonally beautiful Hamburg Steinway concert grand.

Franz Liszt was of course the leading piano virtuoso of his day, and he wrote these pieces for his own concerts. Hence they bristle with formidable technical difficulties and challenges. These are surmounted by Nojima without breaking a sweat; he almost makes them sound easy. His playing here is a revelation. He is a consummate virtuoso, and his huge, effortless technique is often mind-boggling, but is always at the service of a profound grasp of and genuinely idiomatic feeling for the Liszt piece he is performing. Indeed, his Liszt playing--with a real command of legato, of cantabile singing tone, and with dazzling pyrotechnics nicely integrated with poetry, sensitivity, a feeling for the phrase, the long line, the architecture of the piece--is in the grand tradition of Arrau and Bolet, the two greatest Liszt pianists of recent decades. This recording should be heard and treasured by anyone who loves Liszt's piano music, and/or by anyone who admires breathtaking pianism.

(Note for audiophiles: I compared this CD to Jorge Bolet's series of digital recordings of Liszt piano works on Decca/London. Of the major classical labels, Decca/London has long been my favorite for sound quality. But in this comparison, the Decca/London recordings are not even close in engineering quality. Which prompts this reasonable audiophile question: if Keith Johnson, working for the small audiophile label Reference Recordings, can capture the immediacy, brilliance, depth, and richness of piano tone that we hear here, why can't the major classical labels, with all their resources, engineer recordings of comparable excellence?)

The success of this CD led to a second Reference Recordings CD of Nojima playing Ravel. It too is exceptionally fine, also enjoys state-of-the-art piano sound, and can be confidently recommended to anyone who enjoys this recording.

Superb technique and outstanding musicianship5
I am often disapppointed in recordings of Liszt's more difficult piano music, as many performers must struggle to merely render the notes faithfully. Here, Liszt's musicality is predominant, supported by nearly flawless technique.

This recording is a superb recital, well and clearly recorded. Rather than repeat the earlier reviewers, let me just add another listener's agreement. A recording most worth listening to and sharing with friends.

A Musician of Great Importance5
It is truly a shame that the name Minoru Nojima is not well known in this country. In the liner notes for the disc he is aptly referred to as a "pianist's pianist." He is an artist of the highest order. For fans of the music of Franz Liszt, or for pianophiles in general, this disc is a must. From the very first rhythmically driving notes of the Mephisto Waltz, to the sublime ending of the Sonata in B minor, Minoru Nojima establishes himself as not only a complete master of keyboard technique, technique in the highest sense, but also as a most sensitive and intellectually piercing musician who has completely digested and transformed these masterpeices of virtuosic and emotional display. Throughout the disc, Nojima pays great attention to the structure of the works, never getting lost in athletic prowress, as so many of his contemporaries do. His Mephisto Waltz is the one of the finest I have heard (although not quite as searing as Kapell's version). With his fearsome technique always in service of the music, Nojima tackles the acrobatic La Campanella with sensitivity and virtuosity. Harmonies du Soir is a beatifully balanced account of the work. The treacherous finger-buster Feaux Follets is played to the hilt. His performance of this miniature masterpiece is one of the finest on disc and should be listened to alongside Richter's and Kissin's interpretations. Nojima's talent for seeing the big picture in large forms is clearly evident in his treatment of the B-minor Sonata. From beginning to end, you know you are in the hands of a master interpreting a master. This album is an outstanding example of music making of the highest order, and it should be in everyone's record collection.