My updated list:
When |
(2001) Mark Westcott -- Schubert, Allegretto in C minor, D.915
https://markwestcottpianist.com/store/liverecital.shtml (his site store, not the piece I list here)
(2006) Mark Fouxman (Marik) -- Feinberg, 6th piano sonata
https://www.samaraudiodesign.com/Company.html (his site, though not a recording of him)
(2010) Agi Jambor -- Bach, Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue
(Oh, man)
(2010) Alexandre Dossin -- Liszt, Miserere du Trovatore
https://www.dossin.net/Alexandre_Dossin/Listening_room.html (his site's listening room)
(a YouTube of Liszt-Verdi - Aida Danza sacra e duetto final, S436)
(2011) Sviatoslav Richter -- Chopin, Ballade no. 1 in g minor
I am grateful for these links!

I just listened to the Alexandre Dossin recording, which is in my book phenomenal!

1. So, first of all, I heard Brendel play Beethoven's op.111 live in 1983 or 1984. That was a crucial experience and I listened many times to his recording afterwards. But the live experience was just much more than any recording can ever be. It was a sacred moment, a moment where time came to a halt...and it was a complete surprise to me!! I felt like I am suddenly catapulted to a different sphere, to something that has to do with the whole purpose of life and with humanity and love and peace and with how we just need to live at peace with each other! Brendel was communicating Beethoven's message to mankind and I was able to hear it!

2. Mahler's Kindertotenlieder, sung by Kathleen Ferrier, conducted by Bruno Walter!! A dark orange-yellow light!... and a sadness beyond any words! I had the old vinyl LP back then. This voice of a mother, this voice of love and tragic, and resignation, and again love and love!!
3. For sure: Dvorak's Stabat mater, Giuseppe Sinopoli, Staatskapelle Dresden, 2001. I listened to it during a legendary drive from my home town to Barcelona in 2008. I had heard parts of it before and even accompanied a bit of it, and even sung a part of it in my school choir as a teenie (Eja Mater) but at this point I felt like this music comes from the core of the whole world! I believe that this is true and always when I listen again to this music I think "What in the world can ever be composed after this one??" It's like the essence of the "eternal female" (Goethe) or...well just listen to it if you like

It's like you hear some music repeatedly without noticing anything, but then suddenly the penny drops and something changes completely!
4. George Gershwin: Concerto in F, Rhapsody in Blue and the three Preludes for piano, I don't remember the pianist and the recording, but this got me electrified and passionate about music when I was 13/14! I badly wanted to learn to play these preludes and play them for "my love", back then! That girl I was in love with! But she wasn't in love with me
But just
today she wrote me a message, btw
5. Bartók: the three piano concertos and the concerto for orchestra! (I also don't remember the interpreters, it might have been Géza Anda, but I'm not sure, since I loaned them from a library, also when I was 13/14 years old.
Well there would be more, of course, Dvorak's New World Symphony, Stravinsky's Firebird and Sacre du printemps and more, and all this was music I used to dance to secretly in my room

and later to Beethoven's Appassionata/Kempff, while others were dancing to Rock'n Roll or Pop or Disco music

Imagine, I could never tell those others: "You know Bartók rocks me!" or "Let's do a Bartók/Beethoven dance party!!" They anyway had no idea of who Bartók or Stravinsky was!! Lol

Well I also got a Beatles tape from a classmate and listened passionately to that one, and later to Abba and Queen, but that wasn't the same feeling, it was somehow just different... but I also loved those and I still love them
