one of the greatest techniques in music history allied to an incredible musical mind.
cziffra is surely one of the most inimitable and unique pianists ever, and also one of the most misunderstood.
his genius lay in his extroadinary combination of hungarian extemporaneous rhythmic and colouristic spontineity, and the sheer volatility of his temperament.
in these regards he is the greatest pianist ever recorded, noone can match the eccentricity and spontineity of his rhythmic personality.
and also - despite all this volatility - he was one of the greatest poets of the keyboard too - listen to the heartbreaking warmth with which he plays the slow sections of liszt's hungarian rhapsodies, and listen to his beautiful and sensetive chopin interpretations.
this man had brains, heart - and whats more - BALLS
and for this - i will love his playing eternally
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
here are some recordings which i particularly adore -
his live totentanz - just PHENOMENAL - never have i heard such a sustained atmosphere of overwhelming aggression and FURY.
the demonic opening see cziffra in his element - unleashing some of the most edge-of-your-seat playing ive ever heard in my life.
the central slow section, is just adorable - he caresses the keyboard with an aching sentimentality.
then.....the czffra trademark - BANG!! we are immediatly awoken from the reflection - to an insanely pissed off cziffra.
from then on- his and the orchestra's demonic drive never lets up - BREATHTAKING.
live performance of liszt HR6 on DVD -
i just have to mention this - many people know cziffra's HR6 for the stunning speed of the octave finish - but to me just as remarkable is the tenderness he gives to the slow section - watching and hearing this has brought me to tears.
the infamous liszt grand galop chromatique (any performance) - just stunning - listen to all the live performances of this as you can, you will notice each and every one is different, and equally superb.
an insight into his spontanious genius.
and last but not least - his reworkings of brahms' hungarian dances - these, more than anything , give you an idea of his pianistic personality - the rhythmic and tonal colour is just mind boggling -
ESSENTIAL stuff.
i could go on, but i hope this makes helps more people appreciate cziffra's legacy - and to make some ignorant sceptics take a second thought.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
posts i made on another forum nearly a year ago....