Dear cmg,
Sorry to hear about your disappointment. Here are two thoughts. When you said
You could have said more clearly that you had email exchange that you believed to have been with Ms. Hatto. I would love to know more about your relationship with Carlo Grante.
I met Carlo in Miami in the early 1990s. He was close friends with a doctoral student studying with Ivan Davis at that time at the U of M, where he also studied with Ivan. The doctoral student was and is a longtime friend of mine, as is Ivan, and she introduced me to Carlo. I socialized with Carlo during that period in his Southwest Dade County apartment (groundfloor) and in my friend's home nearby. My recollection of him is that of a brillliant, kind man. A world-class pianist then, as he is now. I hope that satisfies your curiosity.
I didn't bother to qualify my email communications with Joyce Hatto and her husband in terms that would indicate that they were perhaps fraudulent and, therefore, to be discounted as evidence that I had been in touch with her. It never crossed my mind until I read this latest attack on the authenticity of her recordings that perhaps everything about her was a hoax. As I'm sure you know, most of us have email relationships with individuals who are actually who they purport to be. For me to assume that Joyce Hatto's emails were a fabrication by somebody else is not the kind of assumptions I routinely make. I'm sure you don't either.
I mentioned Carlo because his name has now been insinuated into this alleged scandal. Having met him years ago and spent time with him socially, I can't imagine that he would be anything but horrified at being implicated, even, as it is, quite innocently. I found -- and still find -- this rumor-mongering to be nauseating. The evidence of a hoax is persuasive but hardly conclusive. What disgusts me is the assumption that the verdict is already in and the Hatto recording enterprise a fake. To think that the prosecutors in the press out there are suddenly omniscient is absurd. And now the NY Times has weighed in? I'm unimpressed. The Times has recently been taken to task for erroneous reporting on the Iraqi war and their notorious false reports about Saddam's "mass weapons of destruction."
What irritates me is that those who are convinced of this hoax are so insulting to people who have had faith that Hatto is the "real thing." Ivan Davis, to those of you who may not know much about him, is one of the most extrodinary musicians alive today. He is, of course, a brilliant pianist and teacher, but also an extremely intelligent man who knows more about the piano repertoire than you or I or anyone else on this forum. And I don't say that lightly. His knowledge is literally encyclopedic. His recording collection rivals any university library. His personal relationships with the greatest pianists of our time and familiarity with their distinctive styles of playing would put him the perfect position to spot fraud in Hatto's recordings. He has spent his own share of time in recording studies and is more than familiar with the current technology. Could he be defrauded? Possible, but not probable.
Here's a typical complication that arises with this hoax/conspiracy theory:
I've read comments that Hatto's recordings sound muffled and distant as if they had been manipulated (faked) by an engineer. A reasonable observation. But, here's a counter-argument: Barrington-Coupe has commented that the latest Ravel recording, done in the last weeks of Hatto's life, had to be remastered to eliminate audible moans on some of the tracks (particularly "La Valse" -- which, interestingly, is Hatto's own original transcription containing passages from the orchestral score that don't appear in the transcription). The moans were Hatto's who was suffering horribly from cancer in the end. And the moans arose from her pain. Barrington-Coupe felt compelled to edit these out. Hatto, it has been reported for years now, refused everything but aspirin to control her pain. She wanted to keep a clear head to make her recordings in the last years of her life. It was the goal that undoubtedly enabled her to survive her particularly insidious form of cancer for so many years.
Barrington-Coupe, I'd also like to add, is a man now in his 80s. He is and has been ill himself for some time. Is it that probable that an ailing, elderly man taking care of an elderly, ailing pianist-wife would have the time, energy and resources to perpetuate the greatest fraud in the history of recorded classical music? Furthermore, he has never been known to be the most accomplished of recording engineers. He runs a shoestring operation out of Cambridge and comes from a "budget-label" background. We're not talking Sony, BIS or Hyperion here, you know.
But is all this a lie? Is this part of the hoax?
For me, all I have to do is listen to Hatto's recording of the Prokofiev "War Sonatas." I love these pieces and have literally dozens of recordings by dozens of great pianists. I've worked on all of them and studied them with some very fine pianists. Just listen to the Eighth, in particular. I defy anyone to find a commercial recording out there that rivals it. It's transcendental playing that is beyond rare.
I'd rather listen to this "hoax" recording than one by any other pianist on earth. And that goes for many of her other recordings. If she's a "hoax," then "Viva la Hoax."