
Beethoven: Complete Piano Concertos / Mustonen, Tapiola Sinfonietta
Ondine celebrates Beethovenâs 250th anniversary of birth by re-issuing Olli Mustonenâs Beethoven cycle with the Tapiola Sinfonietta. The three volumes were originally released in three separate volumes from 2007-2009. Mustonen, described by The Sunday Times as âliving dream of pianismâ, is known for delivering fresh and visionary approach to standard works â this is evident in these masterful recordings of Beethovenâs concertos. Mustonen is a particularly fitting exponent for Beethovenâs music as the composer himself was also both visionary and revolutionary in his approach to tradition. The recording of Piano Concerto No. 1 includes Mustonenâs own cadenzas. Beethovenâs own Piano Concerto arrangement of his Violin Concerto is also featured â one of Mustonenâs signature pieces.
REVIEW:
Mustonen plays the five concertos of a piece, not starting out with Mozartean elegance in the first two and building up to mature Beethoven somewhere in Concerto No. 3. He attacks every bar vigorously and with decisive intent. In my experience, no one since Mikhail Pletnevâs highly original and at times eccentric cycle on DG has sounded so personal in music that too often trips off the fingers with glib sameness.
My overall defense of a cycle that will strike other listeners as totally arbitrary comes down to Mustonen being a composer, not a touring pianist playing subscription concerts. These are a composerâs responses to Beethoven, and Mustonen has the fingers to express them with confident assurance and at times with dazzling flourishes. In my corner this release is one of the most refreshing of the Beethoven year.
â Fanfare
Ondine celebrates Beethovenâs 250th anniversary of birth by re-issuing Olli Mustonenâs Beethoven cycle with the Tapiola Sinfonietta. The three volumes were originally released in three separate volumes from 2007-2009. Mustonen, described by The Sunday Times as âliving dream of pianismâ, is known for delivering fresh and visionary approach to standard works â this is evident in these masterful recordings of Beethovenâs concertos. Mustonen is a particularly fitting exponent for Beethovenâs music as the composer himself was also both visionary and revolutionary in his approach to tradition. The recording of Piano Concerto No. 1 includes Mustonenâs own cadenzas. Beethovenâs own Piano Concerto arrangement of his Violin Concerto is also featured â one of Mustonenâs signature pieces.
REVIEW:
Mustonen plays the five concertos of a piece, not starting out with Mozartean elegance in the first two and building up to mature Beethoven somewhere in Concerto No. 3. He attacks every bar vigorously and with decisive intent. In my experience, no one since Mikhail Pletnevâs highly original and at times eccentric cycle on DG has sounded so personal in music that too often trips off the fingers with glib sameness.
My overall defense of a cycle that will strike other listeners as totally arbitrary comes down to Mustonen being a composer, not a touring pianist playing subscription concerts. These are a composerâs responses to Beethoven, and Mustonen has the fingers to express them with confident assurance and at times with dazzling flourishes. In my corner this release is one of the most refreshing of the Beethoven year.
â Fanfare
Description
Ondine celebrates Beethovenâs 250th anniversary of birth by re-issuing Olli Mustonenâs Beethoven cycle with the Tapiola Sinfonietta. The three volumes were originally released in three separate volumes from 2007-2009. Mustonen, described by The Sunday Times as âliving dream of pianismâ, is known for delivering fresh and visionary approach to standard works â this is evident in these masterful recordings of Beethovenâs concertos. Mustonen is a particularly fitting exponent for Beethovenâs music as the composer himself was also both visionary and revolutionary in his approach to tradition. The recording of Piano Concerto No. 1 includes Mustonenâs own cadenzas. Beethovenâs own Piano Concerto arrangement of his Violin Concerto is also featured â one of Mustonenâs signature pieces.
REVIEW:
Mustonen plays the five concertos of a piece, not starting out with Mozartean elegance in the first two and building up to mature Beethoven somewhere in Concerto No. 3. He attacks every bar vigorously and with decisive intent. In my experience, no one since Mikhail Pletnevâs highly original and at times eccentric cycle on DG has sounded so personal in music that too often trips off the fingers with glib sameness.
My overall defense of a cycle that will strike other listeners as totally arbitrary comes down to Mustonen being a composer, not a touring pianist playing subscription concerts. These are a composerâs responses to Beethoven, and Mustonen has the fingers to express them with confident assurance and at times with dazzling flourishes. In my corner this release is one of the most refreshing of the Beethoven year.
â Fanfare





















