I am at loss for words.
It's certainly an OK performance. It makes structural sense, is technically sound, and has a good understanding of the usual performance style. But there's nothing incredibly engaging or original about the interpretation.
de gustibus et coloribus non est disputandum
Everyone is entitled to their opinions, but if I may comment on them...You shouldn't use his age to argue against his performance. What if the performer was unknown and you just heard the audio? Would you have that bias? I don't think so. Also, let's assume that life experience really does play a role in interpreting music (which I don't think it does), but let's just assume it does. Bunin's father died when he was just thirteen years old. This is a time in every boy's life where the relationship with their father is so crucial. Every thirteen-year-old needs their dad. In most cases this has a long-lasting effect on the child throughout their whole life. This is a tragic life experience in itself. Who knows what other problems he may have had up until the competition? Who are you to judge him this way?
I've read enough posts by 'rachmaninoff_forever' to know why he +1'ed the comment so surely the case is settled based on that alone?If you do not think that life experience plays a part in performance, there is absolutely no need to continue this discussion since the whole concept of piano playing at the highest of levels is beyond your comprehension; offended or not, that is a simple fact of piano life.Even Liszt's masterclasses had him discuss experience and true emotion and there were many peices that he would not accept to be played, no matter how good the student, since they were not mature enough to attempt it yet. Life experience plays a 99% role in playing excellent piano, 1% being techinicalities and fingerwork which would be so engrained in your body and soul that no technical feat is too great.Have you read Cziffra's biography? The same is said by him; I am not trolling with nonsense here so do not assume as such.It is indeed sad that his father died young, but this Chopin piece is not about death. You can't compare one tragic situation with every piece of music you ever play! He could play the Chopin Prelude in E minor (the one with just chords in the left hand) since that is heart-wrenching and was even subtitled by George Sand's daughter on the island of Manorca where he wrote it, and others, as 'suffocation', along with feelings of despair. Now if he played that whilst thinking of his last days with his dad, it would perhaps be one of the most wonderful performances ever!There you are 'telling' us that your video is incomparably the greatest version of this piece, but based on what? On your own interpretation. Yet, there you are simultaneously telling us that our opinions are wrong. I don't get it?It's a great performance; all the videos are of this, but even without knowing anything about his age, I'd still say it was fast and the dynamics/general control of the piece's movement do not move me in the same way as the others.You could just as well post a video of some 6 year old child 'prodigy' (the most vulgar term in the English language) playing Beethoven and say it's the great piece. I would then say that the kid doesn't even know what year Beethoven was born, how many other pieces he wrote, that he was probably half deaf when he wrote that particular piece or the background to the piece, if indeed it has somethin of interest.Then show Cziffra playing it who was indeed a child prodigy, but then went on to be invovled in war, escape, be captured again, his hands tortured, his son die in a house fire, and then hear that piece. His absolute, unimaginable control of his hands despite torture (he wore a wrist band on his right arm to give more strength following torture) and his complete awareness and appreciation of Beethoven and his life.But I suppose the child prodigy plays it better in your eyes...
I much prefer Samson Francois
Thank you, thank you thank you. I am surprised I have never heard of this gentleman. I just read his Wikipedia page and this quote from him I wanted to share:"It must be that there is never the impression of being obliged to play the next note."Brilliant. Tell that to Bunin! I particularly enjoyed his piece and I didn't know why; now I read this quote, I understand why. That's it.What a great pianist. Shame he died through drugs and alcohol so young; I thought that was a pop and jazz thing, not classical!I will delve into his recordings more.
wait, which pianist died of a(n) substance abuse problem?