Sviatoslav Richter The Complete Album Collection (2015)

Sviatoslav Richter - The Complete Album Collection (2015)  Music

Posted by juanchito at April 2, 2018
Sviatoslav Richter - The Complete Album Collection (2015)

Sviatoslav Richter - The Complete Album Collection (2015)
MP3 CBR 320 kbps | 15:25:40 | 2.2 GB
Classical | Label: Sony
Sviatoslav Richter - The Complete Warner Recordings (2016) (24CDs Box Set) {Warner Classics}

Sviatoslav Richter - The Complete Warner Recordings (2016) (24CDs Box Set)
EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks+.cue, log) | Front, Back cover | 20:17:08 | 4.71 Gb
Classical | Label: Warner Classics / 9029593016

Often named the supreme pianist of his era, Sviatoslav Richter (1915-1997) was a poet of the keyboard and an enigmatic, sometimes eccentric figure. These 24 CDs span three centuries of music – repertoire for solo piano and piano duo, chamber music, song and concerto – and bring Richter together with other great artists of his time. As the New York Times wrote, his pianism “combined astonishing technical mastery with bold, wide-ranging musical imagination. His control over the colorings of piano tone was incomparable.”
Sergey Rachmaninov - The Complete Piano Concertos and Paganini Rhapsody (2007) [The Russian Piano Tradition Series]

Sergey Rachmaninov - The Complete Piano Concertos and Paganini Rhapsody (2007) 2CDs
The First Soviet Recordings. The Russian Piano Tradition Series.
Sviatoslav Richter, Yakov Zak, Lev Oborin (pianos)

EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue&Log) ~ 405 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 331 Mb | Scans ~ 30 Mb
Classical | Label: Appian Publications & Recordings | # APR 6005 | Time: 02:24:36

It's a wonderful treat to find an album whose interest rests equally on its musical as well as historical merits. As such, the present two-disc sets of the complete Rachmaninoff concertos and Paganini Rhapsody cannot be beat. The three pianists heard here – Richter, Zak, and Oborin – represent the pinnacle of postwar Russian pianists. Richter is most likely the one still known to the majority of American listeners. But Zak (who was immensely influential not only as a performer but as a pedagogue) and Oborin (who was the first winner of the Chopin Competition) were recognized equally during their lifetimes. All three had a profound and obvious command of Rachmaninoff, and the performances heard here clearly demonstrate this fact.