Tag: Piano

  • Jörg Demus RIP Austrian Pianist Dies at 90

    Jörg Demus RIP Austrian Pianist Dies at 90

    Sad news, and I have no time to give him a proper eulogy. The pianist Jörg Demus has died at the age of 90. R.I.P.

    https://halids.com/austria/the-pianist-jorg-demus-died-in-90-years-of-age/

  • Pizza Delivery Guy Plays Beethoven Viral

    Pizza Delivery Guy Plays Beethoven Viral

    We’ve all heard of “moonlighting” as a way to make ends meet, but this is taking things to a whole other level.

    While out delivering pizzas, Bryce Dudal, soon to begin his freshman year of college, surprised one of his customers by sitting down at his piano and effortlessly dispatching the third movement of Beethoven’s “Moonlight” Sonata (which, obviously, is not the sheet music on the piano). This would be remarkable in itself; but then Dudal claims to be entirely self-taught.

    Here’s the full “story,” complete with inane newscaster commentary:

    If you listen closely, you can hear he’s transposed it to Cheese sharp minor.

  • Louis Kentner Warsaw Concerto Fame

    Louis Kentner Warsaw Concerto Fame

    When he was hired to play the piano in a World War II potboiler, he asked that he not receive credit, for fear that it would damage his integrity as a concert artist. But when the spin-off record sold millions, he wisely changed his tune.

    Today is the birthday of Louis Kentner (1905-1987). The pianist went by several names. He was born Lajos Kentner to Hungarian parents in the present-day Czech Republic (then Austrian Silesia). Among his teachers at the Royal Academy of Music in Budapest were Arnold Székely (piano), Leó Weiner (chamber music) and Zoltán Kodály (composition). He began performing in public at the age of 15. Until 1931, he was known professionally as Ludwig Kentner. He settled in England in 1935 and became a naturalized citizen in 1946.

    Kentner excelled in the works of Franz Liszt. He founded the British Liszt Society. The sprawling “Years of Pilgrimage” was among the works he tackled complete. He also gave radio broadcasts of the complete sonatas of Beethoven and Schubert, and Bach’s “The Well-Tempered Clavier.” He was the pianist of choice for Béla Bartók, who requested him as soloist for the Hungarian premiere of his Piano Concerto No. 2 and the first European performance of the Concerto No. 3. Later, Kentner gave the British premiere of Bartók’s Scherzo for Piano and Orchestra.

    Also in England, he gave first performances of works by Sir Arthur Bliss, Sir Michael Tippett, and Sir William Walton (Walton’s Violin Sonata, played with his brother-in-law, the violinist Yehudi Menuhin).

    Nothing he played, however, touched so many as Richard Addinsell’s “Warsaw Concerto,” which became world-famous following its use in the 1941 film “Dangerous Moonlight” (known in the U.S. by the more lurid title, “Suicide Squadron”). The piece, never heard complete in the film, took on a life of its own when arranged as a mini Rachmaninoff-style concerto by Addinsell’s frequent collaborator, Roy Douglas. The eight-minute playing time ensured that it would fit perfectly on two sides of a 78 rpm disc. Its sheet music sales went through the roof, and the “Warsaw Concerto” was a smash. It was not the first spin-off concerto from the movies, but it did spark an unlikely rage for concertos at the movies.

    Kentner’s legacy has been tied very closely to my own radio work, since it is he who performs the theme to my weekly show, “The Lost Chord” (which is, for the record, the “Berceuse” from Kentner’s 1972 recording of the “Transcendental Etudes” of Sergei Lyapunov).

    So it is with gratitude, as well as with admiration, that I offer this remembrance of Louis Kentner on his birthday!


    Kentner’s recording of the “Warsaw Concerto:”

    His first of three recordings of the “Berceuse” from Lyapunov’s “Transcendental Etudes” (this one made in 1939):

  • Horowitz Moszkowski: Start Your Day With Genius

    Horowitz Moszkowski: Start Your Day With Genius

    Start your day off right with Vladimir Horowitz performing Moritz Moszkowski’s Etude in F major, Op. 72, No. 6.

    Of course he was 82 years-old. Here’s how he played it as a younger man.


    PHOTO: Horowitz, mercurial, ever magical, at 82

  • Chopin’s Birthday Liberace Plays On

    Chopin’s Birthday Liberace Plays On

    Happy birthday, Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849).

    Liberace loved Chopin. In fact, he claimed to have been dubbed “The Chopin of TV.” When life gives you lemons, make lemonade. Make sure you stick around for the three violinists – and hornist! – at 2:13:

    Now watch as Liberace transforms into Chopin himself (starting around 1:40) and back again (around 4:25). In case you don’t get it, you can judge the time travel from the dissolve from electric light bulbs to actual candles in the candelabra:

    Liberace and Virgil Fox on “The Mike Douglas Show” (Next: Ben Gazzara!):

    Those were the days…

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