J menz! What is that supposed to mean?!
I, on the other hand, think sayers has talent and it was demonstrated in part of the other prelude. Certainly not in this. That said, though, you (sayers) shouldn't post performances where you have to explain away the faults. You just shouldn't post them. Period. Microphones
or old pianos are no excuse for that unearthly fortissimo in the other prelude. And stopping in the middle of a piece and proceeding at 1/10th the speed can never be justified. At least in a performance. Which is what the audition room is all about. N'est-ce pas?
Hi birba,
As you know, the world is a very imperfect place. Faces are imperfect, pianos are imperfect, pianists are imperfect, behaviour and personalities are imperfect, our minds are imperfect, et c., and the cult of perfection is something I tend to reject. I've always normally done two takes of a composition - one that is out of control and without fear, and the other quite careful, more calm and also evasive of any risk taking - and the more sincere first one has always ended up being my personal preference. The world is flooded in "perfect" recordings from multiple takes, splices, the finest microphones, et c., and it just doesn't appeal to me. A pianist can record the Chopin preludes one measure at a time in "perfect" studio conditions - I know of a concert pianist who did that - but that sort of thing isn't for me to do.
No matter where the microphones are in a hall, my sound will tend at times to overload them. At least if the microphones are not too far away then some of the pianissimo to piano dynamic range effects can be captured without them subsiding too much into the noise of the preamp or below the microphones' sensitivity.
And the piano-pianissimo playing is what is most important, in my opinion. Both ends of the dynamics spectrum have transformative power, but anyone can play loud if he wants to. There is more of an art to quiet playing and it tends to be far more beguiling. And often one gets the best of such beguiling effects from a piano manufactured to older design specifications, not a recent one. As in 1920s to early 1990s C. Bechstein grands, 1930s to about 1968 N.Y. Steinway D concert grands, et c.
Just listen to this 1928 C. Bechstein grand with the original hammers and hammer felts - I am quite confident that no one will get this type of sound out of a year 2015 C. Bechstein grand: