Awful?
This is what is known as a TRUWAY interpretation.
His technique doesn't match his fury, but if it did, I couldn't imagine a more sensetive interpretation.
Okay. For the very last time. (Even my patience has its limits.)
OPUS: This is a perfect example of your adolescent artistic aethestic. "Extremism" is not a virtue. It's an example of excess. But emotional adolescents like you perceive extremism as the pinnacle of artistic achievement. The ancient Greek philosophers discovered the principle of the "golden mean" well before you were born. As a metaphor, it points in the direction of an aesthetic whose gravitational weight hovers around that which is not exreme. Why? Well, because life and art, for true adults, is about the gray areas, not about black and white. There are no absolutes in a universe that is characerized by ceaseless change. Therefore, we must be pragmatic. Nothing, ultimately, is "black or white."
Your adulation of this embarrassing display of adolescent exhibitionism is typical of your critical responses to music. This performance -- even if refined by an improved technical approach -- would be crude and childish, by any mature musician's standard.
Was it Wordsworth ( or Coleridege) who said that poetry is emotion recollected in tranquility? No matter, the point is that unrestrained emotionalism is not high art, it's simply the absence of discipline that renders art memorable. Without discipline, it's only narcissism.
This crude "Orage" that you admire is a perfect example of performance narcissism. And if you find this performance to be significant, then you have a real problem. Fix it, please. Your defense of trash is growing tedious.