Tag: Pianist

  • Ashkenazy Retires Suddenly at 82

    Ashkenazy Retires Suddenly at 82

    Vladimir Ashkenazy, one of the foremost pianists of the past half century, has abruptly announced his retirement. Curiously, this was done with no advance notice. There will be no farewell tour. All engagements have been cancelled for 2020, effective immediately. It’s unclear whether or not this will extend to his conducting. Hopefully illness is not a factor. Ashkenazy is 82 years-old.

  • Abbey Simon Pianist Dies at Almost 100

    Abbey Simon Pianist Dies at Almost 100

    Philadelphia-born “supervirtuoso” Abbey Simon has died, just a few weeks shy of his 100th birthday. Simon studied with legendary pianists Josef Hofmann (at the Curtis Institute of Music) and Leopold Godowsky. It was New York Times critic Harold Schonberg who lent him his supermemorable title. Simon died in Geneva on December 18.

    Simon plays Ravel, “Alborada del gracioso”:

    A conversation with Abbey Simon:

    Obituary in the New York Times:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/21/arts/music/abbey-simon-dead.html

    “If I retire in January, I’ll be dead by May… Music has been my whole life.”

  • Paul Badura-Skoda Dies at 91

    Paul Badura-Skoda Dies at 91

    I am sorry to report, the pianist Paul Badura-Skoda has died, just shy of his 92th birthday. The news comes only a week after his death was rumored on social media. Who would want to perpetrate an internet hoax about the death of a 91 year-old pianist?

    As I had previously confused him with Jörg Demus, another musician with a venerable career, who died in April at the age of 90, here’s a clip of the two playing together, in a selection from Franz Schubert’s Fantasia in F minor.

    Want to live a long life? Take up the piano.

    https://www.gramophone.co.uk/classical-music-news/pianist-paul-badura-skoda-has-died-at-the-age-of-91

  • Remembering André Previn a Musical Giant

    Remembering André Previn a Musical Giant

    It’s been impressive and heartwarming to observe the outpouring of affection for André Previn the past couple of days. Previn, of course, died on Thursday at the age of 89.

    A fabulous and frequently stunning musician, he was not only a top conductor, but also a fine pianist – fluent in both the classical and jazz worlds – a talented composer, totally without pretense, a crackerjack writer of film scores and musical arrangements, an author, an entertaining raconteur, and a sly wit. He was a true Renaissance man, like Leonard Bernstein, though he tended to play his cards a little closer to the vest. His love life could be a little over the top – he was married five times – and who knows, if he had come up in the age of Twitter, maybe he would have taken more of a beating.

    Previn never achieved the level of public adulation that Lenny did, which is why the tsunami of love from all quarters kind of comes as a surprise to me. A pleasant surprise, granted. Criticisms of some of his musical performances were akin to damning with faint praise. On the other hand, when he was on, he was really on. The man could conduct the tar out of Rachmaninoff, Vaughan Williams, Prokofiev, Shostakovich, and William Walton, and he could surprise in his easy mastery of composers such as Richard Strauss.

    I was lucky enough to see him conduct live twice. In 1995, he led a luminous performance of Vaughan Williams’ Symphony No. 5, with the Curtis Symphony Orchestra, which he recorded with the ensemble shortly thereafter. As is generally the case – Curtis is one of the top conservatories in the world – the students played like gods.

    Later, I saw him lead the Philadelphia Orchestra, in 2009. On the program was Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 24 and Strauss’ “Symphonia Domestica.” It was a shock to realize at that point that Previn was 80, and it was with concern that I watched as he stepped with evident care onto the stage, as if he were living the famous Danny Kaye routine. It was painful to see, and one of those instances where you wonder if the conductor is even going to make it to the podium.

    The Mozart may not have been transcendent, but it was still a joy to hear him play (he conducted from the keyboard), even if some of the facility was diminished; but the Strauss, which he conducted from a chair, was as assured as it had been when he made his knock-out recordings of the complete tone poems with the Vienna Philharmonic.

    I was also fortunate enough to interact with him twice. The first time was wholly by chance. It was in the early ‘90s, a day like any other day, and I walked out of my apartment building in Philadelphia to encounter André Previn passing on the street. Startled, I said the first thing that popped into my head – which was, I am embarrassed to report, “Maestro! Good to see you!” To which he replied with a wry smile, “Good to see you, too.”

    It was on 18th Street, below Spruce. He was heading south into a residential neighborhood, where he must have been staying, because at the time there was nothing else in that direction. Of course, I lived a block and half from the Curtis Institute.

    The second time was an actual conversation, in which we got to talk music. It was in the late ‘90s or early 2000s, and Previn was engaged in recording a couple of Korngold albums. I know it was after he did the symphony, but it may have been before he recorded the film scores, both for Deutsche Grammophon. He remarked that he would love to record the complete “Die tote Stadt” with Renée Fleming, but it was a matter of getting their schedules to mesh. Can you imagine? Unfortunately, it never came to pass. I also asked him why he didn’t include the overture in his otherwise fine recording of Korngold’s “Much Ado About Nothing.” His answer, again with that smile: “I didn’t know there was an overture!”

    Because of the timing of his death, it’s been hard to engineer a proper tribute, but I will be working Previn’s recordings into my air shifts over the coming week. So you’ll have a good chance of encountering his artistry if you tune in on Monday from 4 to 7 p.m., Tuesday from 1 to 4 p.m., and Wednesday from 4 to 6 p.m. In fact, I am planning to make the playlist on Tuesday all-Previn, encompassing his talents as conductor, pianist, and composer.

    On Friday at 6 p.m., “Picture Perfect” will focus on his work in the film industry. He was involved with 50 movies, and on top of everything else won four Oscars.

    Then next Sunday night, February 10, on “The Lost Chord,” I’ll present an hour of his original concert music, at 10 p.m.

    All times are EST, and all shows can be heard on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

    Finally, Patrick Jonathan reminded me of this classic Morecambe and Wise sketch with “Mr. Preview” conducting the Grieg Piano Concerto. As an American, it is my only exposure to Morecambe and Wise, but it has the reputation of being the ne plus ultra of the team’s career.

  • Remembering Oscar Levant’s Genius

    Remembering Oscar Levant’s Genius

    “Happiness isn’t something you experience; it’s something you remember.”

    Bearing in mind the words of Oscar Levant, I hope that you had a happy Christmas.

    Levant was born in Pittsburgh on this date in 1906 to Orthodox Jewish parents from Russia. It was his father’s desire that his sons become either doctors or dentists. Ever the contrarian, Levant opted to become everything else instead.

    A preternaturally talented musician, Levant studied in New York with the great Polish pedagogue Zygmunt Stojowski. By his early 20s, he was in Hollywood, where he met and befriended George Gershwin. With Gershwin’s death, Levant became regarded as the foremost interpreter of the composer’s piano music.

    Levant himself was a composer of talent. In Hollywood, he scored over 20 films. He also wrote and co-wrote popular songs, including the enduring “Blame It on My Youth.” Determined to become a “serious” composer, he sought out and undertook private studies with Arnold Schoenberg. He also found work as a Broadway composer and conductor.

    But it was likely through his memorable appearances on radio and television that he became best known, as a brilliant panelist possessed of impeccable timing and an acid wit. His remarks were invariably off the cuff, and this spontaneity would sometimes throw the sponsors into a panic. A show was cancelled after he remarked, “Now that Marilyn Monroe is kosher, Arthur Miller can eat her.”

    Now a certified – some would say certifiable – celebrity himself, Levant appeared in a number of feature films, including “An American in Paris” (1951) and “The Band Wagon” (1953). He played himself in the Gershwin biopic “Rhapsody in Blue” (1945). He would receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in recognition of his recording career.

    On top of everything else, Levant wrote three books: “A Smattering of Ignorance” (1940), “The Memoirs of an Amnesiac” (1965), and “The Unimportance of Being Oscar” (1968).

    Levant was as famous for his neuroses and hypochondria as he was for any of his actual talents. He smoked prolifically, became addicted to prescription drugs, and was frequently in and out of mental institutions. He died of a heart attack in 1972, at the age of 65.

    “There is a fine line between genius and insanity,” he once quipped. “I have erased this line.”

    Happy birthday, Oscar Levant – even if only in remembrance.


    Levant plays Gershwin:

    Levant on “The Tonight Show” with Jack Paar:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nVOl49AHD6Q

    Levant plays his Sonatina:

    Levant in “An American in Paris:”

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