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So sorry to hear this. My introduction to Chopin on disc was a 33.333 RPM 7-inch Concert Hall vinyl, back in the late 1950s or early 1960s.
He spent four years in Poland as a student and performer before moving to London in 1958 and is there to great effect on the Narodowy Instutut Chopin Box (the one some of us got for a mistakenly knockdown price a few years ago). The Mazurkas come across especially vividly on the 1849 Erard he plays. This will get a spin today.
So sorry to hear this. My one acquaintance with the pianist was at the Colston Hall in Bristol in the late fifties. He gave a stirring performance of Beethoven’s 5th concerto which I remember to this day. The orchestra was probably the Bournemouth or the Birmingham SO but I can’t be definite about that after all this time.
Money can't buy you happiness............but it does bring you a more pleasant form of misery - Spike Milligan
I've only seen this now. RIP. I'll never forget a performance he gave at the National Concert Hall in Dublin of Mozart's Jeunehomme Concerto. He caressed the keys in a way I've never seen anyone else do. Mesmerising musicianship.
I've only seen this now. RIP. I'll never forget a performance he gave at the National Concert Hall in Dublin of Mozart's Jeunehomme Concerto. He caressed the keys in a way I've never seen anyone else do. Mesmerising musicianship.
Never saw him live, but my introduction to the Mozart piano concertos was his 1968 recording of 9 and 12 with the Vienna Radio Orchestra / Brian Priestman. Just as you describe it Jimbo.
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