And so, for those in the UK, another prestigeous Leeds piano competition has come and gone. Did anyone see the 'highlights' on BBC2 last night? And whose music were we enlightened with? Brahms, Chopin, more Brahms, Tchaikovsky, yet more Brahms and Prokofiev. All typical fodder if you want to win a prize such as this. To relieve the increasing tedium (which was becoming almost unbearable by the time T's first Concerto began), I periodically resorted to listening to some real keyboard music. In the past contestants I've witnessed selecting Haydn or Mozart have stood no chance. Even with Beethoven you have to pull something really unusual out of the bag.
Yet the choice of music made sence, if I had to play the Steinway grand they used I would have chosen something similar. These pianists aren't idiots - they may say (I suggest) in public how such instruments are the peak of perfection for all piano music, but in competition they throw such fanciful notions out of the window. Placed side by side, you become quickly aware of which music suits these instruments the best. Then there is the added bonus of achieving greatest superficial effect from the weakest intellectual material!
Roll-on next years competition.
Rod
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
Yet the choice of music made sence, if I had to play the Steinway grand they used I would have chosen something similar. These pianists aren't idiots - they may say (I suggest) in public how such instruments are the peak of perfection for all piano music, but in competition they throw such fanciful notions out of the window. Placed side by side, you become quickly aware of which music suits these instruments the best. Then there is the added bonus of achieving greatest superficial effect from the weakest intellectual material!
Roll-on next years competition.
Rod
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
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