Tag: Piano

  • Goodyear’s Nutcracker a Solo Piano Treat

    Goodyear’s Nutcracker a Solo Piano Treat

    Capturing the essence of one of Tchaikovsky’s most colorful scores on a single instrument might seem like a tough nut to crack. But it was a prerequisite for pianist Stewart Goodyear if he was going to undertake something as ambitious as “The Nutcracker.”

    “I first transcribed the march for the CBC in Toronto, and I was delighted by the experience,” he says. “And then I looked at the entire full score to see if it would be just as pianistic, and to my happiness it was. It took me two years just going through the score, because I wanted to be very faithful to everything that Tchaikovsky wrote.”

    His 2015 recording of “The Nutcracker,” issued by Steinway & Sons, was selected by the New York Times as one of the best classical music recordings of the year. Now, like a Herr Drosselmeyer of the keyboard, Goodyear will unpack his portmanteau of musical enchantments at McCarter Theatre Center tonight at 8 p.m.

    As luck would have it, McCarter will also be collaborating with the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra tonight at 7:30 p.m. George Manahan will conduct members of the orchestra and the Montclair State University Singers in Handel’s holiday juggernaut, “Messiah,” across town at Richardson Auditorium. Soloists will include Patricia Schuman, soprano; Mary Phillips, mezzo-soprano; Ryan MacPherson, tenor; David Pittsinger, bass-baritone.

    Music-lovers will have the option of enjoying Handel’s monumental rendering of the life of Christ, deployed by chorus and orchestra, or the more secular pleasures of Tchaikovsky’s confectionary ballet expressed intimately on a single instrument.

    Read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/12/classical_music_stewart_goodye.html

  • Ivan Moravec Czech Pianist Dies

    Ivan Moravec Czech Pianist Dies

    It is with sadness that I share the news of the death of the Czech pianist Ivan Moravec. He was one of the outstanding Chopin interpreters. Here he is performing music of Josef Suk, who was the focus of last night’s “The Lost Chord.” The show will repeat Wednesday evening at 6, at wwfm.org, though I hasten to add there is no Moravec on that program. Perhaps someday soon.

    Moravec plays Chopin:

    A great loss.

  • Victor Borge Liszt Comedy Classic

    Victor Borge Liszt Comedy Classic

    It’s hard to believe, I know, but I just have been too busy today to post anything. As an easy way out, my recent anecdotes about Liszt put me in mind of this classic — and brilliant — piece of shtick with Victor Borge. Enjoy.

  • St Francis Liszt and a Piano Prodigy

    St Francis Liszt and a Piano Prodigy

    Perhaps you’re observing the holy day of Yom Kippur today (in which case you’re probably not on the computer), but if saints are your thing, you‘d be hard pressed to find one more beloved than St. Francis of Assisi – unless you’ve misplaced your car keys, in which case St. Anthony is your man. Today is the Feast Day of St. Francis, so be sure to take a moment to kiss your pet.

    Here’s Franz Liszt’s “St. Francis of Assisi Preaching to the Birds,” as performed by Mieczyslaw Horszowski:

    In his later years, Horszowski was a venerated piano pedagogue at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. Although he was never a musical celebrity, I feel sheepish admitting that in my callow youth, at the time I saw him perform in the 1980s, I was unfamiliar with his estimable reputation among musicians. I did a double-take when I deduced his age from a program note. He was well into his 90s, but played with a hypnotic fluency that belied his years.

    Sometime later, I was very much looking forward to his 100th birthday recital – scheduled to take place at the Church of the Holy Trinity on Rittenhouse Square, I seem to recall – but unfortunately he had to cancel due to ill health. Horszowski died in 1993, one month shy of his 101st birthday. Surely, Horszowski had one of the longest careers of any performer. He was already playing in public in 1901!

    He was a pupil of Leschetizky, who was a pupil of Czerny, who was a pupil of Beethoven. Here’s his obituary in the New York Times:

    http://www.nytimes.com/1993/05/24/obituaries/mieczyslaw-horszowski-is-dead-pianist-100-mastered-the-greats.html

    He didn’t marry until the age of 89 (perhaps the secret to his longevity?).

    All of his recordings are cherishable, but I have a special soft spot for three albums he recorded for Nonesuch records late in life, especially his Chopin, which is some of the most beautiful I have ever heard. His “Kinderszenen” is also excellent, and his Mozart. Okay, everything this man touched turned to gold.

    Here he is at 95, playing Chopin in Tokyo:

    PHOTO: Break the fast with St. Francis

  • Otters Play Piano Delighting Camille Saint-Saëns

    Otters Play Piano Delighting Camille Saint-Saëns

    Otters playing the piano? I suspect Camille Saint-Saëns would be delighted. (These are real otters, by the way, as will be immediately obvious when you follow the link.)

    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/you-otter-believe-these-zoo-animals-can-play-piano-harmonica-xylophone-180951590/?utm_source=twitter.com&no-ist

    While we’re at it, here’s “Nessun dorma” with goats.

    PHOTO: Emmet Otter’s Jug Band Christmas

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