«Les gens commencent à voir qu'il entre dans la composition d'un beau meurtre quelque chose de plus que deux imbéciles - l'un assassinant, l'autre assassiné…»
The Musée des Beaux-Arts in Lille is home to one of the most impressive art collections in France, aside from the museums of Paris, but it is little known, and its treasures have remained largely unstudied…
Il n'est pas besoin de rappeler la traditionnelle méfiance des philosophes envers l'art et les artistes. Ainsi la philosophie de l'art, inaugurée avec Platon, commence-t-elle paradoxalement par une condamnation des « beaux-arts » et de la poésie. Cependant la philosophie de l'art peut naître lorsque l'expérience esthétique devient problématique. Primitif, exotique, populaire, gothique, brut, naïf, l'art se charge lui-même de faire éclater toute définition canonique du beau, contestant les évidences esthétiques héritées du passé. …
Tempered by Rimsky-Korsakov’s orientalism and Tchaikovsky’s eclectic refinement, Anton Arensky’s pristine, elevated style is nowhere more arresting than in his two splendid piano trios. These richly sonorous, predominantly elegiac compositions are magnificently played by the Beaux Arts Trio. Recorded sound is of demonstration quality, and these sensational accounts deserve the strongest conceivable recommendation.
Since the Beaux Arts Trio last recorded Beethoven's Triple Concerto in 1977 two of its personnel have changed, with Ida Kavafian and Peter Wiley taking over from Isidore Cohen and Bernard Greenhouse. That leaves Menahem Pressler, now in his seventies, as the ever-lively survivor. Not only does Pressler's playing sparkle even more brightly in the concerto than before, he is an inspired protagonist in the Choral Fantasia, setting the pattern of joyfulness in this performance from his opening improvisation-like solo onwards. The other prime mover is Kurt Masur, who has rarely conducted more electrifying Beethoven performances on disc.
Tempered by Rimsky-Korsakov’s orientalism and Tchaikovsky’s eclectic refinement, Anton Arensky’s pristine, elevated style is nowhere more arresting than in his two splendid piano trios. These richly sonorous, predominantly elegiac compositions are magnificently played by the Beaux Arts Trio. Recorded sound is of demonstration quality, and these sensational accounts deserve the strongest conceivable recommendation.