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Brahms - Michelangeli, Ballade Op.10 No 2 in D major

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Uploaded by on Dec 16, 2008

(Lugano, 1981)

Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli (January 5, 1920 June 12, 1995) was an Italian classical pianist. He has been regarded as among the most commanding and individual piano virtuosos of the 20th century, among names such as Horowitz and Richter. Along with Ferruccio Busoni, he is often considered the most important Italian pianist.

Born in Brescia, Italy, he began music lessons at the age of three, initially with the violin, but quickly switched to the piano. At ten he entered the Milan Conservatory. In 1938, at age eighteen, he began his international career by entering the Ysaÿe International Festival in Brussels, Belgium, where he placed seventh (a brief account of this competition, at which Emil Gilels took first prize, is given by Arthur Rubinstein, who was one of the judges. According to Rubinstein, Michelangeli gave "an unsatisfactory performance, but already showed his impeccable technique"). A year later he earned first prize in the Geneva International Competition where he was acclaimed as "a new Liszt" by pianist Alfred Cortot, a member of the judging panel, which was presided by Ignacy Jan Paderewski.

Michelangeli was known for his note-perfect performances. The music critic Harold Schonberg wrote of him: "His fingers can no more hit a wrong note or smudge a passage than a bullet can be veered off course once it has been fired...The puzzling part about Michelangeli is that in many pieces of the romantic repertoire he seems unsure of himself emotionally, and his otherwise direct playing is then laden with expressive devices that disturb the musical flow."[1] The teacher and commentator David Dubal adds that he was best in the earlier works of Beethoven and seemed insecure in Chopin, but that he was "demonic" in such works as the Bach-Busoni Chaconne and the Brahms Paganini Variations.

His repertoire was strikingly small for a concert pianist of such stature. Owing to his obsessive perfectionism relatively few recordings were officially released during Michelangeli's lifetime, but these are augmented by numerous bootleg recordings of live performances. Discographical highlights include the (authorized) live performances in London of Maurice Ravel's Gaspard de la Nuit, Chopin's Sonata No. 2 and Robert Schumann's Carnaval, Op. 9 and Faschingsschwank aus Wien, Op. 26. The Gaspard, as well as his playing of Ravel's Piano Concerto in G set standards for those works and his reading of Sergei Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 4 is comparable to that of Rachmaninoff himself. His Claude Debussy series for DG is something of a benchmark, if it is sometimes accused of being a little unatmospheric ("swimming in cool water," in Dubal's words). Several DVDs of live performances, and a master class, are also available.

As a composer, Michelangeli wrote 19 Folksongs a cappella for the SAT men's chorus from Trent (Italy).

Michelangeli was something of a hypochondriac, famous for last-minute cancellations of his concert recitals. His last concert took place on May 7, 1993 in Hamburg, Germany. After an extended illness he died in Lugano, Switzerland.

(Wikipedia)

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Top Comments

  • how beautiful michelangeli plays brahms.the sound is is so amazing because he has got such a tremendous control in touch and creating an adequate tone for this ballade.some people say that brahms must always sound heavy and inelegantly,but here we can listen to the contrary,brahms espressivo by elegance.

  • One of the best piano playing! 10 times better than any other pianist...

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All Comments (21)

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  • He was a true maestro of the piano .One could sense greatness and maturity when played.

  • So many echoes of Schumann

  • @redkeithh beautifully stated.

  • @Starwalker6978 Bit OTT but he was great

  • I tensed up at how chillingly beautiful the opening measures were. Michelangeli has, for me, been the only pianist for Brahms.

  • Inspiration like this cannot be repaid - thank you. It is of interest how differently Glenn Gould plays this, yet I am not inclined to compare and contrast the performances, each superlative in their individual ways. And after all what any listener hears and experiences is not only the performer but the composer as well, and also hears the echoes and responses from his or her own world of auditory imagination. It is real wealth, not the Bank kind.

  • strepitoso!!!

  • Brahms...............

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