glad uyou all liked this recording. this is not one of medtner's more difficult tales, though anything he wrote has a certain amount of difficulty...
for me the truly hard part is in finding the right tone color. medtner by instinct wasn't thinking of the objdctive piano sounds like scriabin or rachmaninoff did, but somehow you have to find a balance when multiple voices are sounding; a balance to articulate the architecture and form; and still leave enough room for a wide range of expression.
sometimes at the beginning, learning his pieces feels stuffy, stiff and somehow unrewarding. but they eventually always (at least the ones i have learned) opened up in the end, when i seem to find the right balance between competing things that allows me to play it and communicate it to an audience, always my end goal.
in general, i don't think we have a lot of reference for his music. his own recordings are not that colorful, perhaps its best to say not that ambitious. hamish milne recorded all the tales, and thats a great accomplishment, but somehow i don't find them inspiring for my own purposes. a recording that shows medtner's true potential at the piano is defeinitely horowitz's recording of a tale from op.51, i think #3? horowitz's only medtner recording, it is full of pianistic effects and colors that the others who approach his music, neglect to use.
all that is to say, i appreciate the comments on this in particular because i put a lot of thought into how i wanted it to sound. t hanks