I talked more of the overall complexity of the competition where I say that Leeds, Queen Elisabeth, Moscow, Von Cliburn are more competitions to seek the complete musician.
That is why, uniquely, in the Queen Elisabeth 2 contemporary scores need to be dealt with in 1 week. Where they have 2 times concertos to play...
Von Cliburn introduces chamber music , which is fantastic.
Let me be someone who does not know about the road of the Chopin competition.
R1. Waltzes and mazurka's.
R2. Nocturnes and Polonaises.
Semis. Ballades and Scherzos.
Final. 1 of the 2 concertos and some impromptus...
I exaggerate, but this is really the essence. It is about 1 composer who largely wrote for the piano solo. Hardly any chamber music, and 2 concertos.
I mean. What the hell do they find so exciting about it, to crown them kings of the piano.
Leeds , Elisabeth and Cliburn winners deserve far more attention from the record labels and managers.
They must be lucky to get in, like Vinnitskaja. Kozhukin does a good job, but they need to work hard to stay there. Where as the Chopin champs have nothing to do to win all recitals and records.
Playing Prokofiev 2 or 3 is nothing like Chopins...
Let us make a Clementi competition. A largely underestimated composer

.