Huh, quite a lot to answer...
Lets start with the easier things:
Hi retrouvailles
Sorry that I didn't translate my musical biography yet, I understand more and more that I perhaps better should do as soon I will find a moment for.
But no, meanwhile Draeseke is analso interesting composer who wrote an oratorio surpassing the Wagner Ring in length, and contrapunctical richness. This composer was just the subject of my musical "Magister" (which is probably something like a bachelor).
No, my thesis was about Robert Kahn, but I think Thalbergmad has already found that.
Hi lostinidlewonder
You are really persistant with your "computerplaying" misconception of what I did.
Please don't bother me any longer with pretensions like "I would not have explained what I have done exactly", since one glance on my first site will already answer this question
which all were played first on a piano-like midikeyboard. The recorded Midi data was edited then detailed and diligently
(This is actually the answer for perfect_pitch to, who likewise should read, before asking, what is said nearly a dozen times in this thread right now)
there for once again: The Bach, Haydn and Liszt pieces are practised and played with real fingers on real 88keys !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
That means again it is me playing the Liszt, Haydn or Bach and me who practiced and played the music live with real fingers in the real keys of a real 88-Key keyboard. And after that just doing some fine detailed correction of those mistakes that disturbes the overall musical intention.
Just take Mazeppa or Feux follets which Rob thought were most likely to sound to regulary and try to let a metronome run beside and you will notice after a few seconds - where ever in the recording you will try - that the playing deviate constantly from any kind of mechanical beat you will test. No computer nor suspected "system" or just "101010010101010110100100101010010010100101010111 musicality" would shape you that, but the very finger that only know by daily practice of the pieces how this music only can be played trying to keep as much as possible the musical order the partition demands.
Yes of course the pieces are playable, but not in the way a computer would "execute" the partitions, since big jumps and chords needs even for the most perfect virtuous pianist still a bit more time than more narrow lying easier playable passages, so actually all human interprets show there little deviations from the metrical order, compensating, the lost time of the more difficult pasages with faster played easier passages. And this I believe is already what Liszt himself expected while composing thoses Studies, since those Jumps in Mazeppa for instance are placed that way, that those "metrical inegalities" or should I better say "inequalities" still mark and support the metrical more important beats like the 1 or 1 and 3, while easier passages are often found on metrical not so important beats like 2-3-4, or 2 and 4 thats why I believe the playing difficulties in Liszts pianostyle are already a necessary unneclectable part of the musical conception of thoses pieces.
OK as it comes to your ears: Yes, you were right with the liszt and the bach were (not mine) but "real" perfomances I found in the net. But You were musically wrong, not to mention the real awful but realistic deficiencies of sound and interpretation of both "real" recordings in nearly every aspect you pretend would make a musical interpretation more natural. So you have to admit that only those problems made it so easy to recognize.
As I told it before if you thought the question , if a computer or a human played, you were absolutly wrong, as I told you none of them was merely "played by a computer" at all!!!
I hope you get that now finaly!!!!'t
by the way: the quotation where you asked which skills i mean is talking of the skills of pianists to play Piano music on a piano.
how you have shaped them makes them sound quite robotic and without expression in many places
If it were so you wouldnt have had any difficulties to judge right, which Haydn was a "robotic" and which one a so called "Human" playing.
You absolutly overestimate what impact the midiediting of selected details has to the whole played performance. It is just to outline what the intentions already has been while playing, for instance to increase the velocity of single notes that belongs to a melodie in order achieve a more homogene singing line, to adjust a articlation that fell a bit apart of the intended Articlation and so on. Be sure, if you really would have heard a computer just play what Liszt has written in his score, you will see how much of just marks of human interpretation dominate everysingle note of the Liszt studies on my site no computer ever could do for you.
Claiming award winnig interpretations and excusing yourself, that you can't provide any is just cheap!! If you can't provide, please be as modest in your judgement as it deserves for people who can't do it better by them self!!!
Hi perfect pitch
You ask for the fourletter wording you did?
here it is:
I only ask since that if you actually don't know sh*t about playing piano, then I feel your testimony to this stuff may seem a little prejudiced in the first place.
About the problems of pianos: If you think about the sound of the real pianorecording I have contributed from the Net before, I can't really see what "pinnacle of perfection" that should be. the Bachpiano sounds dull and poor in colour nuances, the Liszt piano is obviuosly so downplayed, that Fortepassages even hurt more than sound anyway and lyrical colors are no more available on a piano like that. And this is nothing unrelistic with Pianos that cant hold their first tonal qualities like a stradivari or guanieri. And of course you know that. But everybody who looses the critical sense for realitiy is obviously in danger to feel him self at the "pinnacle of perfection". We won't have that beautiful pianosound established up to now, if the constructors of keyboard instruments would have thought that way and had not struggled the whole history of Keyboardbuilding for improvements of their instruments with all technical means of their time and I am happy that they still go on like this.
best
Steffen