This is more or less about the recording process. Here the story goes...I asked Michael Rickelton to write a piece for a concert I was playing on the 200th anniversary of Chopin's birth, and he happily agreed even as he was extremely busy. He completed the piece on February 5, 2010, and I premiered it on the March 1, 2010 Chopin celebration in which the program was:
Chopin Polonaise-Fantasie op. 61
Two tributes:
Finney: Mazurka (1996)
Rickelton: Fanfare for the 200th anniversary of the birth of Frederic Chopin
Chopin: Scherzi (op. 20, op. 31, op. 39, op. 54)
It was prepared and setup in advance by my prodding and inquiry that this recital would be recorded, and low and behold it was so set up and everything carried out, save a switch on to the audio plug-in...I received a DVD with no sound! And there was nothing that could be done about it (I did for fun watch some of the silent video which was comical for seeing me speak before some number...who knows what I was saying, and goodness how longwinded I was!).
Well it came about as Mr. Rickelton was expecting a recording to be used to present the piece at a seminar, with the premiere being lost, I was left on my own to come up with a recording. While it was in my fingers, I had made a few trial runs with my own equipment (cassette, voice recorder, video camera), but knowing these would not suffice, I scheduled a couple meetings and was, by chance, able to come up with two sessions with different people. The first was at the Steinway Gallery on their D in the concert hall, with a man who records for the Country Music Association. This was cut short due to a family crisis on his end, but with what we accomplished I never was able to communicate what I want - he was able to somehow make the loud, percussive, modern piece sound like soft, easy listening; I never knew a recording could so well misrepresent the intent of a performer! So the other session happened early in the morning in the hall where I had presented the recital (a smaller Yamaha C) with the people who had neglected to get the audio for the premier. I have respect for pianists who are able to take a difficult piece of music and in the midst heavy schedules on all sides, run out and get a great result in a couple takes...I could not function in this environment - it is much like preaching a sermon to a bunch of chairs. It amazes me the difference when the aspect of communication of thought is stripped away (having a present recipient of the message).
Well I have a few thoughts...I was not able to get a good recording of Rickelton's Fanfare. This is a piece of deceptive difficulty. On paper it looks like it should set well, right in the hands, but in reality it is extremely difficult to pull off cleanly while communicating the point. It proved to be a big show at the concert...really the biggest ovation a night which had all Chopin's Scherzi (which went quite well for my part!). Also, most of the recordings were done on the Yamaha, yet it sounds like so many different instruments. The recordings I present here are all of the same piano...but the first is the voice recorder placed, actually behind the piano with the sound going out into the hall (very well played; overall the best performance). The second is from a video camera which was out in the hall (A very exciting performance to me, but too fast), and the third is the one using the schools expensive equipment (very sloppy performance - of two early morning takes, this was the better one)...I think it was one mic out in the room, and two or three almost touching the strings - I had no part in setting this up. I hate the close miking...it enhances mistakes and gives a very biased picture of the actual sound picture - but they know about recording and I don't!. Whatever it was that recorded Rickelton's Nocturne in this same hall and instrument gave the truest picture of the piano and the hall in the concert experience (I think he used an mp3 player of some kind):
https://www.pianostreet.com/smf/index.php?topic=35637.0Playing and performance wins the battle. Mr. Rickelton chose to use the voice recorder over any of the others, because it was the best performance and put the piece in the best light concerning his intentions...what do you know about that?
(Well I hope you've enjoyed this discourse!)
Original Wavs here (Voice and professional equipment):
https://www.mediafire.com/?o7du7l30qk7pwy6