Exactly! Liszt's piano music. Not Bach's. You're being a Glenn Gould. Bach cannot be played like Liszt and Liszt cannot be played like Bach. The same goes for any composer. Each composer has their own character and style. Those works are to be played that way. You saying this was Liszt's interpretation is ridiculous because as a composer Liszt had more respect for the works of other composers and would not alter them if it was not approved let alone such drastic alteration as you seem to be employing. Out of curiosity, have you ever tried playing things as written by the composer? Another thing you claim on your website to play the concert etudes. I would like it if possibly you could post a recording of you playing either "Un Sospiro", "Gnomenreigen", or "Waldesrauschen" for research purposes.
Hi alistaircrane4,
Mozart was a true classical composer and I stick very close to the score in his music. Some of his piano works are a bit romantic in content - such as the B Minor Adagio, the A Minor Rondo, the Fantasy and Fugue in C Major [what a great fugue!] - but even then I keep fairly close to the notation.
With the music of Liszt I tend to be very close to the score. The interpretation might not always be conventional, but the notes involved tend to be exactly what is published. Some of my interpretive ideas are from Liszt himself as he has been involved with me preparing his music for performance.
And with Rachmaninoff, and much 20th century music, I keep close to the notation. For a living composer this always is the situation unless they approve of the deviations: I tell them, you want this to be really powerful here, the piece has gone through this structure for almost X minutes [and I detail the structure], this section here needs to be of high emotional power and import compared to everything else in the composition . . . this is where the music finally brings everything into laser focus and intensity with total and unsparing inner commitment . . . and it is up to you whether I go there or not.
About me playing the Liszt Concert Etudes, now that I am back in 1995 condition when I still practiced the piano regularly, I'll be performing these and will have some recordings to share.
There is a hold up due to difficulty of temperament: having to schedule performances at "random" dates years in advance is something that is a challenge. I think it is better to have performances concentrated in a small window of time, and to have some option of down time between these "windows" and for thinking about music, deciding what to perform next, working on music compositions, et c., and then a build up to the next "window" of performing.
And I do have real world friends in Stockholm, and also family, and it wouldn't be nice for them if I were to just "disappear" for five to seven years from them because monumental Liszt recitals are strewn all over the calendars from 2015 through 2022 randomly like someone tossed confetti on them.
The fact that any performance has to be scheduled for years in the future, regardless of venue, and with no other order or structure to be experienced by the performer than just throwing a dart at a dart board, is concerning. I understand that the venues have their schedules, but for very heavy weight performing there needs to be at least the ability to put everything in the same year across all the venues. I can live with disappearing for a year.
Things weren't like this in the U.S. In the U.S. there always are some possibilities to schedule near term performing at churches and other such venues.
Not that I am back in the condition of my teenage years, I've been in discussions with scheduling a tour involving charity performances at U.S. churches, all scheduled within a two to three month window . . . not spread out over seven years, which would be ridiculous especially with the economics and time involved for all the long haul flights back and forth across the Atlantic.
In Europe, this seem to not be something one could do.