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WHAT'S HAPPENED TO THE GLAMOROUS young German violinist ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER? She used to be just another pretty face, riding to glory aboard great war- horses named Beethoven, Tchaikovsky and Brahms. On her latest Deutsche Grammophon album, though, she harnesses two modern violin concertos and tames them both. In Alban Berg's ineffable 1935 two-movement concerto, a requiem for the daughter of Alma Mahler Gropius, Mutter evokes the music's intense, passionate suffering. In Wolfgang Rihm's gorgeous Time Chant, written for her last year, Mutter's splendid fiddle soars ethereally over the Chicago Symphony led by James...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Short Takes: Mar. 29, 1993 | 3/29/1993 | See Source »

...promoting ascetic; a pianist of Horowitzian technique who, with curious exceptions like Bizet and Sibelius, usually shunned the Romantics. Sony Classical's magnificent GLENN GOULD EDITION, to be completed in 1994, presents Gould's entire recorded oeuvre (much of it previously unreleased). His Haydn is superb; his Mozart and Beethoven range from riveting to risible; his moderns dazzle. Above all, sensibility and omnipotent fingers made him a peerless contrapuntalist, who could with uncanny rhythmic acuity articulate multiple lines and transmute complex musical thought, especially Bach's, into pure and exciting expression...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Short Takes: Mar. 8, 1993 | 3/8/1993 | See Source »

...this case Scott as a college professor and Jami Gertz as the barely literate young volunteer who reads to him because he is blind -- then lumbered it with portentous yet unpursued references to battered women, child abuse, academic plagiarism, organized crime and the Bataan Death March (not to mention Beethoven's deafness, Baudelaire's profligacy and the evolutionary significance of the animal in the title). Despite these highfalutin distractions, the story trudges along to its always foreseeable end: the old man dies but lives on in the young woman he has persuaded to make something better of herself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Patient Is Impatient | 3/1/1993 | See Source »

...feel," explains psychiatrist Mark Goulston of the University of California, Los Angeles. "Mature love is when you love the person as he or she is." It is the difference between passionate and compassionate love, observes Walsh, a psychobiologist at Boise State University in Idaho. "It's Bon Jovi vs. Beethoven...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Right Chemistry | 2/15/1993 | See Source »

...turn Bach, George Winston and Liszt, Rzewski plunged from a protracted Beethovenian trill into a truly staggering display of improvised fire-works for his cadenza. In a few minutes Rzewski demonstrated his command of Harlem stride bass, cartoonish sound effects, and Chopinesque fabric melody, while referring back to Beethoven just often enough to excuse his departures. The conclusion was a gradual rise from the lowest D-flat (tonic for the Beethoven) to the highest note on the keyboard, which was repeated more and more softly and less and less frequently until after a long rest it was slammed once more...

Author: By Carl J. Voss, | Title: Composer Rzewski Performs Three Personal, Searching Pieces | 2/11/1993 | See Source »

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