Originally posted by Frankli:
Schnabel, living in a time that there weren't old playable pianos around, seems to have realized the disadvantage of a modern piano. I once read that he played on prepared pianos that gave him more control over the sustain.
Schnabel, living in a time that there weren't old playable pianos around, seems to have realized the disadvantage of a modern piano. I once read that he played on prepared pianos that gave him more control over the sustain.
In his own book "My life and music"(1961) Schnabel explains why he has chosen to play a Bechstein rather than a Steinway, and he seems fully happy with that instrument, because it allows him to do what he wants.
So, I might have misread about prepared pianos, or the source was unreliable, but anyhow, it doesn't seem to be true, so I take it back.
Comment