I've been listening to Ronald Brautigan's cycle of Beethoven Sonatas on BIS and enjoying it immensely. I also have a couple of his recordings Mozart Piano Concerto discs and they are equally fine.
Brautigan is a great player. He does seem to have a penchant for quick tempos and a certain restless quality
which I find suits the instrument, with it's lack of sustain (relative to a conventional Concert Grand) very well.
I am left wondering if he plays this way in order to overcome the instrument's limitations, or whether this is how he would play regardless of the instrument, and therefore finds himself particularly well suited to a fortepiano.
My other experiences with fortepianos have not been happy ones. I vividly remember seeing, but not hearing a note, of Robert Levin playing Beethoven's Emperor Concerto from the cheap seats in Boston's Symphony Hall many years ago with Hogwood and the AAM. Many fortepianists (Derek Han in particular) struck me as Pianists who lacked the technical chops to succeed on a conventional instrument and were salvaging a career by playing a novelty instrument. Even the better practitioners, such as Levin, made discs that reminded me of Beecham's old saw about Harpsichords sounding like two skeletons copulating on a corrugated tin roof.
Anyway, Brautigan has banished all those thoughts, and will make further inroads into my pocketbook as I finish adding the rest of his cycle.
Brautigan is a great player. He does seem to have a penchant for quick tempos and a certain restless quality
which I find suits the instrument, with it's lack of sustain (relative to a conventional Concert Grand) very well.
I am left wondering if he plays this way in order to overcome the instrument's limitations, or whether this is how he would play regardless of the instrument, and therefore finds himself particularly well suited to a fortepiano.
My other experiences with fortepianos have not been happy ones. I vividly remember seeing, but not hearing a note, of Robert Levin playing Beethoven's Emperor Concerto from the cheap seats in Boston's Symphony Hall many years ago with Hogwood and the AAM. Many fortepianists (Derek Han in particular) struck me as Pianists who lacked the technical chops to succeed on a conventional instrument and were salvaging a career by playing a novelty instrument. Even the better practitioners, such as Levin, made discs that reminded me of Beecham's old saw about Harpsichords sounding like two skeletons copulating on a corrugated tin roof.
Anyway, Brautigan has banished all those thoughts, and will make further inroads into my pocketbook as I finish adding the rest of his cycle.
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