I don't know if Powell has played your works, however, my point is still valid. You defend those whom you have a vested interest in.
He has played three of them. Your point - if indeed it is that, as you allege, I "defend" those in whom you perceive me to have a "vested interest", is far from valid, for the following reasons.
I am not in the habit of "defending" anyone and, since no one has been "accused" of anything until you came along with what you admit to being your insult towards Jonathan Powell's Sorabji playing, there has in any case been no need for anyone to supply a "defence".
I do not know what you men by a "vested interest" in the present context but can assure you that, whilst I have indeed encouraged any artist with a genuine desire to perform Sorabji's music, I have no more sought to
coerce anyone to do so than I have sought to harangue any record company to record any of it; each artist and record company has made and continues to make their own decisions about performing and recording repertoire.
As a musician, I don't need to have heard Sorabji's works played better than Powell to know that it can sound like music. In other words, I don't need a side by side comparison to know that his rendition was atrocious; he plays it like it's a piano exercise. Even more concise: He plays like Sh8t! Insult: He's just a pianist who plays obscure works because he knows comparison would be difficult. Thus, critiques have no option but to give praise for his four hours of aural torture; otherwise, they would fear looking like idiots not knowing how the work should sound.
There are several flaws in your argument here, as follows.
OK, you don't need to hear someone besides Jonathan Powell playing Sorabji to know that it "can sound like music"; of course you don't - it IS music! (wrote he, stating the b******g obvious).
OK, you don't need side by side comparisons to help you evaluate what you might think of any particular music or performance thereof; fair enough insofar as it goes. But you do not "know" that Jonathan Powell's rendition of any particular Sorabji work is "atrocious", or that he plays any or all such works "like a piano exercise" or that he plays like - well, what you say he does; these are not things that you "know" - they are merely your personal your opinions and, whilst you are entitled to hold and express them, they are quite simply not shared by anyone that I've ever encountered and, beyond your snide and, frankly, meaningless comment about a "piano exercise", you provide no detailed reasons in support of your uniquely negative views.
Mr Powell does not only play works that you describe as "obscure" and, in any case, Sorabji's works are a good deal less "obscure" than they were 30+ years ago; indeed, on one occasion when he premièred a big work of mine as the second half of a recital programme in London, his first half consisted of Chopin's Polonaise-Fantaisie and Beethoven's Op. 109, neither of which strikes me as especially "obscure".
Assuming that, by "critiques", you mean "critics" (a "critique" is, afer all, what a "critic" writes), what you describe - again, without a shred of explanation - as "four hours of aural torture" simply doesn't figure, as the longest work that Mr Powell has ever recorded is Sorabji's Fourth Piano Sonata, which is not much more than 2 hours in duration.
As to critics not knowing how a work
should sound just because they might not have heard it previously, many critics review first performances of works without their perceiving that demand on their time to be an especial encumbrance and, let's not forget, some critics can read scores so would be expected to have some idea of this anyway. That said, however, I have yet to encounter a professional critic who praises something just because it goes on for four hours (if indeed it does), so that argument is fatuous; critics will say just what they want to say, regardless and, to a certain degree, that's pretty much what they're paid to do. I have also yet to encounter a professional critic who has ever feared being thought of as an "idiot" for any reason.
As well, since your argument has no legs, you resort to attacking me. That is fine. I can now brag that the great Alistair Hinton has attempted to insult me because he disagrees with my opinions.
You have been neither "attacked" nor "insulted" by me; Jonathan Powell, on the other hand, has received both attack and insult from you (although hopefully he is unaware of this).
My "argument", as you call it, has as many or as few "legs" as anyone reading it might decide that it has. Yes, I do indeed disagree fundamentally with the opinions that you expressed above, even though I have no detailed idea what in particular might have prompted them; I pointed out to you that I have never heard such opinions from anyone else and that I have heard many contrary opinions, each of which is true and pertinent in the context of what you wrote.
I may very well take you up on your offer to play Sorabji's Opus Craptasticum just to show you how it should sound.
If that is how you would term Opus Clavicembalisticum, I'm not so sure that you would need to do this and it might appear to gave a less than positive impression of what you think about the music itself but, just as
you say that you don't need "side by side comparisons" in order to figure out how a piece should sound, neither do
I need you to "show" me how that particular work should sound (unsurprisingly, since my acquaintance with it dates back almost 45 years). I have not "offered" you an opportunity to play the work, nor do I need to, since its score is readily available and anyone is welcome to work at it and perform it if they can and wish to do so. If you choose to proceed with preparing a performance of it, please feel free to go ahead and then anyone interested can hear what you make of it once it's ready and you perform it. You'll get no discouragement of your endeavours from me and, if you play it well, you'll get the opposite - and not just from me, I'm sure.
It has been a few years since I checked the Sorabji Archive. Is the facsimile still available for ~$50? Or is the revised edition I think you were working on now available?
Facsimiles of both the autograph ms. and the publication of Opus Clavicembalisticum have for many years been available, each priced at £60 inclusive of mailing within UK (supplements are added for airmailing elsewhere). The new edition is not something that I have been working on personally and I cannot provide any further information on this at the present time; I would add, however, for the record, that Jonathan Powell re-edited several pages of the score - about 16 of them, I think - for his own use when he performed it, but we do not supply these. If you wish to receive any further information, please check the brochure on the archive website at
www.sorabji-archive.co.uk and if you wish to orer anything please email sorabji-archive@lineone.net.
And now - please - back to Hamelin and his achievements here! If you want to start a thread about something else, please do.
Best,
Alistair