Berg, Piano Sonata by bethlevin1 published on 2020-07-21T22:45:58Z Alban Berg's Piano Sonata in a single movement, Opus 1, was published in 1910. Genre Classical Comment by Christopher Gordon Forbes Wow. I did this sonata in college. Beautiful interpretation 2024-02-22T18:55:04Z Comment by Vito Palumbo This is a fabulous interpretation of this gem of music history 2024-02-10T11:30:16Z Comment by Wim Hoogewerf This is Berg the post-romantic, full of emotion, not the precursor of serialism with it's 'no-nonsense' objective interpretation. What a pleasure to hear this! 2023-06-28T07:05:10Z Comment by Daniel Plante What a beautiful performance - it's paced perfectly! Wow! Thank you for this. 2023-05-12T16:19:40Z Comment by C o n r a d u s z ✌️And your own music? 2022-06-23T21:17:11Z Comment by AaronAlterComposer Brilliant and passionate interpretation! 2022-03-28T05:47:20Z Comment by Martin Max Schreiner, composer I thoroughly enjoyed your performance! I haven't heard this work in long time. So, this is a wonderful re-acquaintance with this early gem of Berg's. 2021-12-28T19:39:00Z Comment by BRIAN BENNETT I'm loving getting totally lost in this Beth.... Thank you..... X 2021-09-05T10:53:23Z Comment by Stephen Clark Wow, I love this thoughtful rendition of Berg's work! BRAVA, dear Beth! 2021-02-15T16:41:51Z Comment by Beethovenwept Re-listening, I still feel chilled with rapture by the way Beth had rendered this piece.... words fail me... 2021-02-10T00:15:53Z Comment by Beethovenwept this is intimate, sacred, transcendental.....dear Beth, you have done Berg a favour. I have written a poem and shall send separately. Warmest wishes from Melb 2021-01-13T23:43:35Z Comment by jeff-8-2 A remarkably sympathetic reading. Berg's typical high drama is lucidly rendered. Small surprise. She is a sorceress at her best here. 2020-09-22T18:46:08Z Comment by Tagline Remarkable and engaging interpretation! If one applied the logical equivalents of chromaticism and atonality in a mathematical transformation of a chess game, most chess masters would feel confounded with the unfamiliar.Yet Beth Levin takes such a piece and finds her way, leading the listener through the seemingly random wilderness. Beautifully done! 2020-07-24T17:26:44Z Comment by Joel beautifully shaped. The audience should have erupted with screams of joy from this performance. 2020-07-24T12:29:51Z Comment by Astrodreamer One of the few performances of this piece that makes complete sense of it! Quite a surprise. 2020-07-23T02:20:49Z Comment by jeff-8-2 40+ years ago ago I had a brief chat with George Perle wherein I mentioned that I thought that the Berg Sonata was a rather good piece.. He responded that he thought it owed too much to the Schoenberg Chamber Symphony....Go figure. 2020-07-22T17:31:04Z Comment by Michael Redmond Wonderful! 2020-07-22T16:13:24Z