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Yes, indeed. I hadn't realised - given that he'd been, in recent years, taken up by a younger generation of pianists that he was quite as elderly - 82. 'Popular' recognition seems to have come relatively late.
Steven Osborne's 1999 album has given me a lot of pleasure over the years. As a pianist, Kapustin didn't just dabble in jazz, he toured with a jazz orchestra for 11 years, so his adoption of that idiom in 'serious' pieces could never be merely superficial. Steven Osborne is a first-rate interpreter. Can anyone recommend other Kapustin recordings?
Steven Osborne's 1999 album has given me a lot of pleasure over the years. As a pianist, Kapustin didn't just dabble in jazz, he toured with a jazz orchestra for 11 years, so his adoption of that idiom in 'serious' pieces could never be merely superficial. Steven Osborne is a first-rate interpreter. Can anyone recommend other Kapustin recordings?
Very sorry to hear this. A really original talent - one of the few classical composers who really 'got' the jazz idiom The hours , days , weeks I've spent (and will spend ) trying to get my fingers around his C major Jazz etude must stand as tribute. His performance is of finger-busting intensity.
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