Performers who died too young
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Originally posted by salymap View PostRe #14 HS I didn't remember Cantelli beingon that flight. How sad that day was.
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally Posted by salymap
Re #14 HS I didn't remember Cantelli being on that flight. How sad that day was.
Thanks Sali and Cali.
HS
Ginette Neveu gave her last concert on 20 October 1949. On 28 October, she was on board an Air France flight from Paris en route to another series of concert engagements when it flew into a mountain after two failed attempts to make a landing at the São Miguel Island airport in the Azores. All 48 people on board the flight died, including Ginette and Jean-Paul Neveu and the French boxing champion Marcel Cerdan. It has been said that Ginette Neveu's body was found still clutching her Stradivarius in her arms.[4] During the return of the bodies to France, Neveu's coffin was confused with that of another victim, Amélie Ringler. The funeral for Ringler had taken place before the error was discovered. On 28 November, Neveu's brother-in-law identified her remains in the coffin disinterred from the graveyard in Bantzenheim.[5]
Édith Piaf, Marcel Cerdan's lover at the time, wrote of Neveu in her autobiography, The Wheel of Fortune: "I would have traveled thousands of miles to hear the great Ginette Neveu
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Juan Arriaga (1806-1826) who, according to those who know about these things, showed enormous promise with his early string quartets, published at age seventeen. I would never have heard of him save for the fact I found an old mono Nixa LP of the quartets, in a secondhand shop. Very enjoyable they are too.
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
I suppose of the the performers lost to the world too early, the one whose work I have appreciated most is Dino Ciani (killed in a road accident in Rome, aged 32). His Debussy and Schumann recordings in particular are second to none.
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Originally posted by verismissimo View PostYes. And this is a wonderful 3 CD set by Ciani: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Genius-Dino-...iani+brilliant
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostJuan Arriaga (1806-1826) who, according to those who know about these things, showed enormous promise with his early string quartets, published at age seventeen. I would never have heard of him save for the fact I found an old mono Nixa LP of the quartets, in a secondhand shop. Very enjoyable they are too.
Returning to performers rather than composers, I thought István Kertész's death in a swimming accident in 1973 was a sad loss as he had much still to give.
Edit: the Guarneri Quartet's recording of the 3 Arriaga quartets is very good, originally on Philips and I think re-issued by Newton Classics.
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Originally posted by Lordgeous View PostThe brilliant David Munrow, sadly by his own hand. 1942 - 1976
I remember his broadcasts with pleasure. RIP DM
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