
It’s easy to understand why Pollini should have been drawn back to
these late pieces, with their harmonic daring and structural subtleties.
He gives a fascinating account of the Barcarolle, austere and detached,
but also intensely focused, though the Polonaise-Fantaisie, one of Chopin’s supreme achievements, disappoints; there’s none of the rhythmic
drive Pollini once brought to it, as if now he is too wrapped up in its
formal innovations. For all its passing beauties, there’s a sense
throughout the disc that he’s more concerned with what he is still
discovering in the music than in communicating to a larger audience; it
often tells us more about him than it does about Chopin. (The Guardian)
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