| Mozart: The Complete Sonatas For Piano Vol 1 / Jeffrey Biegel CDs (2009) Box Set
$14.65 |
| Mozart: The Piano Sonatas / Mitsuko Uchida CDs (2003) Collector's Edition; Box Set
$31.29 |
| Vlado Perlemuter Mozart: Piano Sonatas CDs (2007) Boxed Set
$16.95 |
| Mozart: The Piano Sonatas CDs (1997) Box Set
$28.49 |
| Glenn Gould Edition - Mozart: The Complete Piano Sonatas CDs (1995)
$34.05 |
| Mozart: Complete Piano Sonatas / Daniel Barenboim CDs (1991)
K 311 classical music
$24.99 |
| Scarlatti: The Keyboard Sonatas / Scott Ross CDs (2005) Box Set
K 311 Work Catalog Number
$194.65 |
| Mozart: The Complete Piano Sonatas, Etc / Daniel Barenboim CDs (2000) Limited Edition; Box Set
K 311 classical music
$41.59 8cds-Daniel Barenboim
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| Gieseking Mozart: Complete Solo Piano Works CDs (1991) Box Set
K 311 Work Catalog Number
$65.39 |
| Collectors Edition - Mozart: Piano Sonatas / Maria Joao Pires CDs (2006) Box Set
K 311 classical music
$27.25 |
| Mozart: The Piano Sonatas / Christoph Eschenbach CDs (1999) Box Set
K 311 Work Catalog Number
$22.69 5 Cds-Eshenbach
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| Mozart: Piano Sonatas K 310, 311, 533, Etc / Alfred Brendel CD (2003)
K 311 classical music
$10.89 Alfred Brendel
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| Mozart Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Sonates Pour Le Pianoforte CDs Complete; Box Set
K 311 Work Catalog Number
$39.15 |
| Fortepiano Richard Fuller Mozart: Klavierwerke III CD (2002)
K 311 classical music
$10.15 There are tons of Mozart keyboard recordings out there, but this one stands out as especially satisfying." Fanfare Magazine, Nov/Dec 2002.Richard Fuller was born in Washington State (USA), studied piano and musicology at Central Washington University and the University of Oregon. His artistic work has provided a decisive impulse to the Fortepiano revival in Germany and Austria. The emphasis of his artistic work lies in the interpretation of the piano, chamber music and the Lied repertoire of the Viennese Classical and early Romantic periods, performed on the fortepiano and clavichord.Richard Fuller is one of the few who has sought to address himself exclusively to the interpretive potential of the fortepiano - the sensitivity and delicacy of an earlier keyboard culture - and who succeeds in convincingly projecting these qualities to the listener. His tempos are, generally, moderately paced, allowing for an easy and natural delineation of Mozartean texture, both harmonic and melodic. He studied harpsichord and fortepiano in San Francisco and Vienna. He demonstrates that while the dynamic range of the modern piano is greater, the 18th-century fortepiano can be a more subtly varied sounding instrument. "One of the most remarkable qualities of Fuller's playing is his range of tonality. Since 1982, his concert appearances have led him to the musical centers of North America and Europe where he appears as soloist, accompanist and member of various chamber music ensembles.
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| Mozart: 3 Piano Sonatas K 309, 310 & 311 / Mitsuko Uchida CD (1990)
$10.89 |