I heard Bronfman play Prokofieff Sonatas 4 and 6 last night.....Is there ever a justification to draw painful tones from the piano? Does Art require this? Or is pounding the piano, well, just pounding the piano?
Is there ever a justification to draw painful tones from the piano? Does Art require this? Or is pounding the piano, well, just pounding the piano?
Personally, I don't think art requires this. Prokofiev, on the other hand, sometimes requires this. I don't play very much Prokofiev. Some people see the piano as an instrument with 200 strings..... others see it as an instrument with 88 hammers! Perhaps the the feeling of being crushed by a battle tank was the intended effect!
The questions are in the wrong order. First ask "Does (this piece of) Art require this?" and then you have your answer to the remainder.
I wouldn't pay to hear Bronfman play, personally, but that's just me!
I would probably pay you to help me learn how to get up on a surf board, however. I'm pretty phobic of sharks, though.
Isn't it the role of the interpreter to make that decision? ..... Some think (and play) "yes," some, I would venture, "no."
I'm curious what you thought of Bronfman's control of balance and texture with the trio! Did the FFF from the Prok manage to creep its way into the ensemble inappropriately? Or was it fairly ideal?
Absolutely. But once that decision is made, that's the way it's gotta be played. Pianos are pretty strong.
bronfman is an absolute master imo; i heard him play rach 3 with the tso/peter oundjian years ago and it was the besti would pay 100$+ to hear a solo recital of prok sonatas and beethoveni've never really worked on prok 6 but iirc i read some article that there is a spot that prokofiev indicates use of fist at some point in it?
I heard Bronfman play Prokofiev Sonatas 4 and 6 last night, capped with Beethoven's Archduke, with Martin Beaver and Lynn Harrell. Bronfman is a magnificent pianist, able to wrest an enormous palette of sounds from the instrument. His technique is sovereign, and his ability to play lyric passages most evocative.At several times during the sonatas, Mr. Bronfman, a great bear of a man, pounded the piano during fff passages with such severity members of the audience noticably jumped, myself (twenty rows back) included, our ears in pain. It sounded, and felt, as if Soviet tanks crushed us beneath their steel treads. I have no doubt this was the intended effect. These moments were often followed by sweet passages played with utmost tenderness (although the Steinway D had to be re-tuned for the Beethoven, a trio rendition that contained not a single harsh tone, yet was full of fire and verve.Is there ever a justification to draw painful tones from the piano? Does Art require this? Or is pounding the piano, well, just pounding the piano?