sjskb,Thanks so much for posting this extraordinary performance! And it's a joy to hear a less-heard composition of Scriabin. I cannot possibly say enough good things about your playing. First, you exhibit a wonderful feel for Scriabin's idiom, and play it very stylishly, developing the various and shifting moods in the piece. More than that, you play it throughout in "the grand manner" with a commanding sweep. Although this piece is virtuosic and of very high complexity, you always distinguish foreground from background. The lush, ultra-romantic melodic line soars, regardless of surrounding, thick-textured fillagree so favored by Scriabin, even when there is accompaniment within the right hand. Phrasing is always artistic in shaping the long line throughout. And despite the frenetic demands of execution, you so often create moments of beautiful and tasteful nuances. Your pedal is employed with a fine expertise to emphasize clarity of line. There is no doubt in my mind that you listen carefully to your own playing in the moment. In short, I'm impressed by your musicianship and musicality overall! Bravo!!Can you please tell us the piano used for this recording? Thanks.David
Hi, Thanks to rachfan for the huge compliment, which i find extremely flattering. I admit this piece is a killer, for its many layers and pounding octaves!! i think it's hard to find pianos like baldwins here in Singapore... the recording was done on a Yamaha C3!!hope to get more comments from the others too!thanks again.
Nice to see someone else from Singapore here! How old was your C3 when you recorded on it? It sounds pretty good, if slightly on the metallic side.
you from singapore too?? great... how old are you by the way? i wished i had a C3. actually did the recording in a studio... i think that piano is about 25 years old?
I love this piece but have not played it. Thanks for posting, I enjoyed your recording very much.
you sound like u've got more expertise about recording than i do, too, and i hope that u'll get all the sound that u want from the lh and places where u want to bring out particular harmonies. this is really a beautiful piece and it did make me think i was eating a fine dessert. it's not often we get to critique such a difficult piece and played without bashfulness. perhaps u might add to our understanding of the piece the reason why it sounds like a blend of 'climaxes' of many different styles - all put into one piece. is this the idea that scriabin was using to create this fantasy (so many different ones) and is this fighting the tradition one or two climax idea? it loses my attention if there is more than two - but, then, again ... i might be listening with a traditional ear. i definately heard a different 'tone' in the 'breaking the clouds' section at the beginning. i thought it was extremely beautiful. but it wouldn't follow the ABAB pattern of stormy, cloud clearing, stormy... so how do u create a difference of feeling in the other sections? i personally feel that it is ignoring the absolute rh melody lh harmony idea in favor of just picking a line and bringing it out in some sections. for instance, making one section be about hearing the tenor line - or the bass a little bit more (still allowing freedom in the rh to 'soar' - but allowing the ear to be tricked). just random thoughts in my head.
Stylistically, I believe that for this Fantasy, an earlier opus of Scriabin, the composer took as his inspiration the innovative harmonies and bravura of Liszt, the overwhelming "storm and stress" of Wagner, and combined those elements with his own hyper-romantic themes--quite a beautiful and powerful wave!
very true... thanks for the contribution! it's a gem of a piece, and i discovered it really by chance....a school teacher just lent me a scriabin CD of piano works, and out of all the tracks, it's the one i instantly love!
yup...that was done in john's studio.... smart!! i'm going to be 26 soon.....by the way, i'm having my first recital in sept...hope u could come at support!!
is it my imagination or is the bass flatter and the treble sharper.
all i can say is... wow + everything rachfan has mentioned. You mentioned you are 26, could you tell us what you do, where you study, studied, if it is your full time career etc.Gruff
Very nice to listen to. Take care when in louder sections, the tone is sometimes forced, sounds too harsh to me. Like the piano cannot get louder, and some climaxes just feel like they plataeu instead of continually increase to infinite ecstasy. Overall really well done! Thumbs up!