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Stephen Hough plays his own "Radetzky Waltz"

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Uploaded by on Dec 30, 2006

Stephen Hough plays his own "Radetzky Waltz" (a takeoff on Johann Strauss Sr.'s "Radetzky March") as an encore after a recital in Quebec City in 2006.

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  • This is pure awesomeness.

  • @Pischnaholic

    "like wit, charm, sophistication, humor, lyricism and style."

    Hey, sorry, I know everyone has different tastes and stuff, but to say that wit and humor is something Hamelin (ESPECIALLY in his compositions) "lacks", is to prove the multiverse hypothesis.

    Or at least intelligent life on Mars... I mean, seriously?

    No "lyricism" in the Little Nocturne? No "charm" in his Minuetto? No "humor" in the Campanella, or the Scarlatti homage? No "wit" in the triple etude or HR2 cadenza?

  • @aardvaark069

    Do you mean his playing or his compositions? If compositions, your statement is rather ironic because the "charm" and especially the "wit" are probably the biggest and most attractive virtues of most of Hamelin's etudes and his HR2 cadenza.

  • Well I am a bit older at 56, but Stephen is the reincarnation of Rudolf Serkin as far as I am concerned. Needless to say I am going to look for any of piano CD's!

  • @aardvaark069 Yes, his playing of those miniatures displays a pianist of rare imagination. I was listening to another one of his albums, "Stephen Hough in Recital," alone in my room one quiet night and was completely taken away by the nuances in his interpretation that I've never heard before in pieces as hackneyed as the Chopin C-sharp minor Waltz of all things -- the voicing, the almost imperceptible variations in tempo, the phrasing. A pianist to treasure.

  • I've always thought Marc-André Hamelin uses too much pedal and plays things much too fast, because he can. (I'm not denying that he is an incredible virtuoso), but Hough is also more of an artist.

    Hough has the most incredible technique. He has nothing to apologize for.

    sanjosemike

  • Am I English? Only by ancestry, but thank you I take your thought as a great compliment.

  • You know you sound really English. Are you English :)

  • Thank you kndly. I do urge you to listen to Rupert Egerton-Smith as well -- especially his Gaspard de la nuit.

  • Stephen Hough has everything that Marc-André Hamelin has -- or more than enough of it, I should say -- and everything that Marc-André Hamelin lacks -- like wit, charm, sophistication, humor, lyricism and style.

    Stephen Hough admittedly lives in a jaded, frightfully ignorant world over-crowded with great virtuosi starved for an appreciative audience, but Hough stands out in that world, and - like young RUPERT EGERTON-SMITH, a fellow Englishman - deserves far more acclaim than he receives.

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