"Masterworks" is a subjective opinion, but claiming anything Godowsky wrote was important, or certainly among the most important, is a load.
It is indeed a subjective opinion, but this no more invalidates it than it implies that it is unique to the writer of it here - which it plainly is not, otherwise, various pianists would not have gone to the trouble to perform and record some or all of these works.
He's an obscure composer like Alkan, who while a few composers respect them and a few pianists play them, they have not had any notable effects on later composers besides the occasional Finnissy piece, who himself is also quite obscure.
The particular century in which it seems you would have us believe you live remains somewhat unclear; the relative obscurity which you would indeed have been correct to accord to Alkan and Godowsky in the past IS now in the past, as the many recordings and performance of their respective piano works testifies. Your grammar and sentence structure lets you down thereafter, although one presumes you to have meant that "Godowsky's pieces have not had any notable effects on later composers apart from Finnissy on occasion - and he is himself also quite obscure"; even then, I'm not sure that Mr Finnissy, who is indeed an ardent admirer of Godowsky, would greatly appreciate your cavalier sidelining of him here, especially as he is not the actual subject of what you are supposedly attempting to write about.
Saying they equal the originals is pretty rediculous >>
Well, it almost certainly would be (provided that "ridiculous" was correctly spelt), if anyone was actually endeavouring seriously to persuade anyone else of any such thing and, as is well known, Godowsky himself would never have made any such claims either for his transcriptive or his paraphrastic work.
The Chopin Etudes, along with the Beethoven Sonatas, are the ultimate staple pieces in any pianist's repertoire.
Utter nonsense. The immense importance of these works is absolutely undeniable, of course - only the most ignorant of idiots would seek to claim otherwise - but one major importance of Beethoven and Chopin as piano composers was that they each sought, in their own ways, to progress and develop the art of piano writing and playing (not to mention, indirectly, piano design and manufacture); they are therefore important "points on the curve to find", so to speak. I suspect that neither composer would have wanted even his finest piano works to come be seen by future generations as the "ultimate" anything, with the implication that they had somehow contrived unwittingly to "freeze" that aspect of their respect art in their own time, never to be capable of further future development.
Everyone plays the Chopin Etudes. Almost nobody plays the Godowsky.
This is, at best, a half-truth. Certainly, many more pianists have, over the years, played the Chopin Études - well, badly and all points in between - than have played the Godowsky. So what? Can the sheer laziness of many pianists alone be used as a legitimate excuse to justify this neglect? Please don't ask me to answer that question; instead, ask it first of yourself and then, if you can, ask it of at least some of those pianists who have played and and do play Godowsky. Then consider and, if at all possible, try to enjoy - and learn from - the answer/s.
There were other composers before Godowsky that "took romantic music to the breaking point" that are much more important.
In notingWe note that you do not name a single one of them, I must also confess to being unaware that the writer who claimed this for Godowsky was necessarily stating thereby that Godowsky was alone in so doing in any case.
Godowsky may have revolutionized the way YOU look at piano, but I doubt it's had the same effect on 99% of the people that have heard his stuff.
If, by so saying, you intend us to assume that your expression of "doubt" is, in your belief at least, an expression of fact, we must also assume that your have first sought the opinions of that "99%" in order to support it - or at least we might consider taking ot to be so up to a point had you bothered to accompany it with so much as a shred of incontrovertible evidence...
Best,
Alistair