Mr. Dvorsky should probably be aware Sorabji was reportedly a "quite staggering" pianist in his earlier days as well.
Indeed - but then Mr. Dvorsky being "aware" of anything much above and beyond his own self-importance seems somewhat unlikely, on present form.
It really is a shame there is no recording of his playing back then.
It is, indeed - and there might have been, had it not been for Sorabji's reluctance; there are a few published leters from the 1930s in which it seems evident that some people were tying to encourage the composer to do just that - but then that's just something else of which our Mr. Divorce-key is unaware (well, we can all play the "Duddles" game, except that I propose to do it just the once rather than banging on with it as Mr Dvorsky does because he likes to draw attention to himself - what was it that Sorabji used to say about the likes of him? - ah, yes - "insects that are merely noisome like to think that they can also sting")...
Whatever anyone's view of the music of Sorabji, what is self-evident is that 35 years ago there were no authorised public performances and no commercial recordings, only a handful of published scores still in print and available and practically nothing in print about him and his work; the fact that so much has happened since in terms of score-editing and general availability, performances recordings and broadcasts and literature about the composer (details at
www.sorabji-archive.co.uk) is its own testament not only to the value of that music but also to the untiring dedication of performers, record companies, concert promoters, broadcasting organisations, editors and musicologists - and had all their work been in vain because Sorabji was not worth the trouble and hardly anyone wanted to listen to this music, it would almost certainly have ceased long ago and Sorabji would have returned to obscurity.
Best,
Alistair