I DON'T care how old this topic is.................
Amazing, no?
I can play the 4th chopin etude at least as fast as richter. But none will hear the notes.
I am tempted to call BS... but I don't know of course.
This is great, but Argerich's are just as good, and cleaner....
I knew quite a few individuals who could play the HR6 at least as fast, but with more control and quality, and most of all much more interesting, musical, with more charm, grace, and abondon, this music asks for.
Also tempted to call BS here, as greatest pianists like Marta struggle.......
...far more musical than this Grynyuk clown.
blabllabla...
Walter Ramsey
The HR 6 is faster than Cziffra, but about 1/10th as exciting.
I like Cziffra's rendition as he knows - and stays within - his limits. But it's Liszt! Those octaves need power and strength...
It's just fast and rather sloppy.
My !&$%ing GOD... THIS is exactly why I haven't joined such childish, moronic, stupid and PATHETIC piano forums ever.... I read through all this crap and I can't believe some of you people!!! Like that Walter Ramsey guy, always noting his name at the end of his posts looking reeaally cool and mature, until you vomit at some of his retarded page 2 comments.
(Although I must confess, a lot of the stuff at page 2 was ridiculously amusing)
First: blond jokes... Originates from the saying that a girl can't be smart at the same time being really pretty. This relates perfectly to those lousy arguments on Alexei Grynyuk...
-<-^***FACTS***^->-This is the BPM speed of each pianist, their starting speed and end speed;
Alexei: 133 - 144
Marta: 128 - 139
Horowitz: 120 - 135
Vladimir Bakk: 109 - 132
Mauro Bertoli: 123 - 130 ------ A link was earlier posted to this guy
Cziffra: 128 - 129
Might seem small differences, but they matter a lot to the listener - and the difficulty!
Alexei is superior. NONE of the others match him in speed and volume, he is the loudest. When Marta reaches her top speed her octaves are reaaaalllyyyyy sloppy... you barely can't hear them either. She is struggling a bit at the first speed too, and it's like she wont accept it, and tries to bang away even faster... something only amateurs do, usually.... I really can't believe second post saying 'just as fast and cleaner...' *sigh* just pure ignorance
I'm not saying Alexei has perfect clarity and control, he misses an octave a couple times, messes the LH chords and the short first two HT octave runs. The third time it's clear, and then the chromatic run afterwards right before the ending is also clear.
Someone said earlier that the most difficult section is the unison, both hands doing octaves. This is NOT correct. After the first LH octaves, the LH does some 4-note CHORDS. Listen closely, not a SINGLE ONE of the mentioned pianists plays this correctly with ease and beauty.
7 consecutive chords are to be played at same speed as the octaves, repeated 3 times!
Actually the one who accomplish this best, is that unknown guy 'Mauro Bertoli'. He has to slow down a little, but he plays ALL 3x7 chords, being the only one... respect
Now... what is Liszt? Liszt is inter alia; speed, virtuosity, technical excellence, loudness/power. Liszt loved extreme technique, and strength. He famously sometimes put technical display above artistic expression. A common critique so let's not deny that...
Also the HR 6 octave section isn't some sort of incredibly beautiful melodic line that should be caressed with utmost love and care! It's fast 16th octaves, P at first, developing to sempre forte, and then PRESTO. Needs speed!
Vladimir Bakk was mentioned a couple times, I like his performance, but come on... it's a recording. He had more time to become familiar with the piano, and warm up his octave technique directly before playing the HR 6. And if sh*t happened, well he could just try again....
Alexei is live, and much faster! Some random Yamaha he had to perform on and didn't know properly, probably! Don't tell me he couldn't play as clear as Bakk if he slowed down and did a recording LOL marik....ZzZzZZzz... I believe he could do his insane tempo perfectly well under such better circumstances.
Jealousy is such a distasteful human emotion :-(
To put in perspective what Grynyuk accomplished, think of the OP of this thread. His name is op 10 no 2, the etude of Chopin. That etude is tempo marked 144 - same as Grynyuks octave speed! ~10 NPS! Or, as you might say, 10 OPS - octaves per second... insane.
Liszt was verryyyy fond of quick octaves, and would definitely have loved Grynyuks speed.