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If I were to name my personal all-time favorite among the great pianists of the 20th century, it would have to be Wilhelm Kempff â a Prussian prodigy who entered the Berlin conservatory (Hochschule fĂŒr Musik) at the age of 9 and is said to have been able around that time to not only play from memory all preludes and fugues from the Well-Tempered Clavier but also to be able to transpose any of them into any key. Fifty years ago, it wouldnât have occurred to anyone to count him among those whom âmore people should know aboutâ; today, many musicians need to be reminded of him. Kempffâs playing is never harsh, thoughtless, superficial, or showy; there is a wondrous sensitivity, mindfulness, and care to his musicianship. A double album with six famous Beethoven sonatas was one of the first LPs my parents ever gave me as a present. He has recorded the entire cycle of 32 thrice over the course of his life, but as amazing as he is as an interpreter of Beethoven and Schubert, I think it is his Schumann recordings which are, in many ways, unsurpassed. He must have had a very personal, almost intimate relationship with that composer (he once wrote that when he was a teenager, a childhood friend drowned while taking a swim; Kempff went home, found Schumannâs âBlumenstĂŒckâ and was deeply moved as he was playing it to himself). There has never been anyone who can bring out the thousand secret colors and shadings of Schumannâs fanciful, mysterious German romanticism the way Kempff could do it.
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I didnât know much about Vladimir Sofronitzky, but glad I came across his recordings of Scriabin. I donât always agree with his rhythmic choices but his sound is totally his own.
For some reason to TB wonât recognise this YT link to one of his last concerts given in Moscow in 1960 (assuming the info online is correct!):
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Yulianna Avdeeva is my favourite pianist. Everything she plays is superb and her Bach project got me through lockdown. https://youtu.be/TIa5MlCTITQ
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Another artist from a younger generation whose technique and musicianship are equally astounding and who does not seem to be well known at all is the Ukrainian pianist Vitaly Pisarenko. Being a winner of the International Franz Liszt Competition, his Liszt recordings (Tarantella, Dante Sonata etc.) are, of course, well worth listening to and watching. But here he is with two pieces by Ravel: