I recorded all the Opus 23 Preludes by Rachmaninov between 1995 and 2000. At that time, I had planned to post these files to a website, and had, in fact, started my own site. Then I was attacked by the Copyright Nazis. I was basically told:
"We don't care if you are a teacher. We don't care if you bought the music you are playing from us. We don't care if you are not charging money. We don't care if this is mainly to introduce fine music to many people who have not heard it. We only care about money. Pay us or we will sue you."
I thought, removed the files, and vowed never again to record, in fact never again to play. And from about 2000 until a couple months ago, I have only played for students in lessons. Now I'm trying to get back into full swing again.
So this and other Rachmaninov files I am uploading are as much as 10 years old. Some have parts I just did yesterday, some a month ago, some were done before year 2000. Because I'm still using the same electronic instrument, time does not matter, although often I completely start from scratch now because something from a few years ago no longer sounds at all right to me.
For this Prelude I studied carefully every recording I could get my hands on, but the performances of Rachmaninov himself are what I paid the most attention to, and certain things that may not sound "legal", such as a slight delay between the big succession of big chords, just before the descending octaves, are what Rachmaninov did. Also, the slight compression of the TAH, ta-ta TAH, where the "ta-ta" notes are actually played a bit to quickly, also comes from Rachmaninov's own style.
However, overall, I think this and many pieces like it are often played so fast, they sound glib, and somehow the power and intensity is lessened for me, as a listener. I realize these are personal views though. I wanted the middle section to completely contrast with the march-like quality of the outer sections, and I always had it in my mind to take a rather huge liberty, starting back very slowly after the central section and slowly accelerating into the speed and even more power than the beginning.
Again, comments would be welcome.
Gary