THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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Mark, I've come to call you to account. I'm the Stoned Guest. Yep. I'm finally here. I guess you know you're toast. You know that I will as a matter of course pick you apart nerve by nerve. Jesus may forgive you His disappointments in you, but I'm not so generous. I've got deadlines to meet. It's time I dragged you by your brittle fried-blonde forelock screaming to hell. Nothing personal. You stand warned. Now let's talk art, our favorite subject. Don't you think Ronald Smith is laughably inadequate for Alkan? Jesusmotherfuckingchrist we can both plow Ronald under. Poor Ronald. Hamelin is good. But don't you think Lewenthal is best FGP after all?? Hamelin's "Quasi-Faust" is full of senseless rubati. I do admit, though, that Hamelin's last mvt. of "Symphonie" is the best broomstick tour of Hell. Whadda ya think? |
bourbon in his bourbon." -Jeffrey Jones, Ravenous. |
Can I watch? Please. |
I've always wished that there was a similar place that had a concert pianist theme, where people like you and I could gather to get tanked and intelligently argue about the great and not great pianists. As the night wore on the jukebox would blast the most raucous smashmouth piano music of Rzewski, Pabst, and Ives loud enough to scare them in the subways. Ronald Smith has a spotty record with Alkan. Where Lewenthal takes L'festin with spirits a little too high, Smith gets just the right sense of humor with L'festin, and that piano he plays it on (in the 1977 recording) itself conveys some of the ludicrousness of the music. But his airbrushing of the "Quasi-Faust" doesn't do anything for me. In fact, I blame that recording for giving me an excuse to not try so hard with contrary motion octave passages. In mm 96-98 Smith plucks at those octaves like he was playing a harp, but I'd been practicing that passage like an olympian trying to get as much sound as possible out of every note at the top and bottom of each octave in each hand. And that's how I would play that passage today if Smith hadn't given me the excuse to try half as hard. Hamelin's Alkan has never done much for me, with the possible exception of the Barcarolle, Op. 65 #6. That, my friend, is a perfectly desolate reading of a short piece of music that is so much more sad than appears at first blush. Lewenthal of all people also does a suitably bleak reading of what I think is among Alkan's most perfect scores. In fact, it reminds me of a comment a departed friend of mine (who would make for a great patron of the concert pianist version of Jimmy's Corner) once made about Emil Gilels' perfoemance of the Bach-Siloti B Minor Prelude at Carnegie. He said it was the only live performance of a piece of piano music he had ever seen that brought tears to his eyes. Tears of happiness and sadness and recognition of absolute beauty. He said it was strange how the piano just was not one of those instruments that inspires that kind of reaction. Well, that's how I've felt about those Lewenthal and Hamelin recordings of that Alkan Barcarolle. The only Hamelin I know that I listen to is his Sorabji 1st Sonata. I can't decide if it's a great piece, and I've never heard another performance to compare it to, but it's Hamelin in fine form. Hamelin beats the hell out of Ponti (who doesn't?), but to me Hamelin for all his skills gives in to the same old cliches. His Schubert B-Flat Sonata, 1st Movement, which he played at Merkin a year or so ago, was a case in point. It was maybe 10 minutes longer than it had to be, and he did a regular Richter-job on it by trying to make it out to be this mystical and heavenly song when as far as I've ever been able to tell it's really just a pretty simple (but effective) tune. I've never really warmed up to the Alkan symphony, but I do remember that Mark Salman did a fine job with it. That was years ago, though, and it was a live concert. So I may have been impressionable in some way that I would not be if I could listen to it when I was damn well ready. Alkan's Concerto for Solo Piano is probably the most frequently played Alkan around here, and with that I usually take John Ogdon for the 1st Movement and Jack Gibbons for the 2nd and 3rd. I think they both make up for each other's shortcomings in those performances. Gibbons just doesn't quite capture the spirit of solitary, self-absorbed grandeur that Alkan (consicously or not) communicates through that music. Ogdon does capture it, but his 2nd and 3rd Movements are relative disappointments in comparison. Gibbons brings that under-rated 2nd movement some real soul, and the 3rd movement he dishes out with just a touch of good humor. Hamelin, I am told, gave a smashmouth performance of that Concerto in New York some years ago, but I missed it. At any rate, I've got dinner to make. |
I agree about how emotional the piano can be, partly for the reason that it is very clean and clear. Like Mozart, not Beethoven, if you compare it to most other instruments. I never got very good at piano, but my brother plays and I love to listen to him practice. It's a wonderful instrument. |
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I find analyzing the music the way you just demonstrated here diminishes it. I think music should be heard and felt and experienced. But, if you analyze every performance or piece of music; that's all it becomes. Just another piece of music. |
i'm sorry if i seem to be following all of your posts, but PLEASE. |
discussion and interpretation of music IS a part of experiencing it. |
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i listen to a lot of things, but gravitate toward piano music because i play it myself and happen to know a lot about it. i also get something of a visceral thrill out of what i sometimes feel is the sense of combat between performer and piano. i listen to plenty of mainstream stuff, but have always found that appreciation of what makes it great is enhanced by appreciating what makes the obscure stuff stay obscure. i used to be a somewhat serious composer, and found that inspiration was more likely to come from listening to and trying to improve upon crappy music than trying to imitate the crowning achievements of the genre. but i go long periods of not listening to anything at all. lately i've been obsessing over old time mountain music like rose maddox and cutesy 50s stuff like teresa brewer, but i don't talk about that stuff so much because i don't consider myself much of an expert on it. just a fan. |
I go more with the mainstream composers, but always love to hear something I never heard of theirs previously (or never knew existed), like a couple of weeks ago, I heard Sibelius' Pelleas & Melisande on the radio. Hell, I know Debussy's and Faure's, but Sibelius? Who woulda thunk. It was really a nice piece too. Wracking my brain during it thinking who and what it could be. Then afterwards came on Copland's Organ Concerto which he wrote for Boulanger when he was in Paris. Copland wrote an organ concerto? Also, a nice piece, before his Americana style took hold, but you could hear foreshadowings of it in the 2nd movement. IMO, both excellent pieces, but overshadowed by the composers' more popular works to forever live in obscurity. I tend to listen more to strings, orchestral, and chamber music, but I know what you mean about the visceral thrill of watching a great pianist tackling something like Balakirov's (sp?) Islamy or Gaspard of the Morning (a little known collaboration between Ravel's grandson, Jimmy, and Juice Newton, and just now starting to find its way into the repertory). Just kidding. I don't know if it's laziness that I don't branch out more, or just comfort level with the old warhorses. Actually, I do know -- it's the laziness. I have a friend who bought that Bach2000 - the complete works on 150 cds, and he's making his way through them all. Now that's dedication. |
Discussion and interpretation is one thing disection another. Once a discussion of a performance goes beyond the general to the nit picky I prefer to stay away. In my mind either the whole performance was good and moved me or it wasn't. I don't need to think whether an artist played a certain note to loud or to soft. It just doesn't matter. |
A few years ago, a young upstart pianist (whose name I unfortunately can't remember) came to Philadelphia to play at the Academy of Music. He was notorious for throwing all direction out the window and playing however he felt....accenting random notes, slowing down and speeding up at whim, etc. I read a few newspaper articles about him, and music critics were up in arms over this guy. How *dare* he? they said. I would have liked to hear him. I think he was performing Rachmaninoff. Does anyone know who I'm talking about? Right now I'm listening to a piece by an instrumental "band" called Rachel's. Their music is neo-classical but on a rock record label (Touch & Go). This particular piece has a repeated cello/violin line in which two notes are slurred together during one of the repetitions. I love that slur. I get excited each time I know it's approaching. If I heard that piece in a live performance and they didn't slur those two notes, I would probably become angry. They're very important notes. |
as an audience member you don't have to think about anything at all if you dont want to. thats why pop and so called country sell millions. The riffs are easy, anthem-like, the lyrics are clear and easy to understand. Just accept the fact, that while you arent thinking, those who are creating and impacting the world with music are, and for that you should be grateful. |
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I found the article about him from the online Philadelphia Inquirer archives, but you have to pay to see the full text. Hmph. The article was titled "Ivo Plays the Boos," to give you some idea of his reception. |
And, I have actually sat in a Symphony Hall and listened to a classical concert or two. Not to mention an opera. So I guess the only difference is I'm not a musician. But, I am a music fan. So if a musician played a piece well and it moved me that is all I really care about. I don't have to compete with them or be better than them. I just have to appriciate their music. |
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There's still "the only difference is I'm not a musician". Have fun. |
So if you're not a musician, then how the hell can you "compete with them or be better than them."? Gratuitous, yes, fulfilling, no. |
reminds me of that time antigone and i were backstage at that Barry Manil... i've said too much |
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ivo pogorelich has a reputation for thinking very very highly of himself. a quote i've seen attributed to him is along the lines of "There were only three great pianists: Horowitz, Rachmaninoff, and myself." i've heard that quote attributed to him many times, but have never seen it fully cited or verified, so who knows if it's real. i found this writeup of that pogorelich concert |
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And, they played a beutiful rendition of Revels Bolerro. That's an interesting piece of music. It can either be exciting or boring. |
Rubinstein made at least 2 awful recordings of Schubert’s great Bb Sonata before he suddenly & startlingly, in his old age, got it just right. It’s a great recording, trust me. I’ll buy it from you if you don’t like it. The sleeve shows him in silk nighties smoking a cigar on a balcony amidst flowers (as I seem to recall). Ivo Pogorelich can blow me. I have saved on audiotape a single cut from a long-ago-discarded album by Ivo Pogorelich: Chopin’s latter Nocturne in Eb. I just now played back that cut. Ivo is not "exciting" or "original" or "dramatic" after all: he’s just another pretentious eleven-fingered social-climbing Liberace-wannabe Third-World pain in the ass. Correct me if I’m wrong. What?! $42?! Hey, Mark, can you pick up the tab this time? |
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