Another pianists stopped by the communists were Liu Shikun. He fortunately didn't diie, but instead he was arrested for 6 whole years.He won Silver Medal (along with Lev Vasselenko) after Van Cliburn at the 1st Tchiakovsky Competiton (and many non-New Yorkers knows that Cliburn won exclusively because of politics.)I don't think Liu Shikun is underrated though. He is kinad famous in China, but I don't think his playing is as good as some other peoples.
A little information please about your statement that Cliburn won because of politics. I have not heard this before. I thought Van Cliburn won iN SPITE OF politics-- the judges wanted to award him first place but were hesitant because of the Cold War.
Liu Shikun is pretty famous in China; one of the first prominent Chinese pianists along with Yin Chengzong and Fou Ts'ong probably.
Ollti MultanenThis is an amazing understanding of the classical music.
That one has, for many years, been on my liszt of least favorite pieces.
Clearly you've only listened to the ugly beginning.Or maybe you connected the Funerailles with the Funeral March from the Sonata #2 of Chopin, which everyone knows you have some personal animosity towards.
Dude the beginning is not ugly it is FRICKING INTENSE! And if you think it's dissonan, it's just a dominant chord of F minor... And the main melody is just great. Liszt was also very deeply motivated to write the piece- it was in memory of his friends who had died in the Hungarian Revolution of 1849...
I ALREADY KNOW THAT. Do you think I'm dumb?
Do you think I'm dumb?
Yes, yes I do.
Yes, yes I do. You're always either plain dumb or "just" sarcastic, and it's impossible to tell those two things apart.
Well I can tell those two things apart, why cant you?#prostituteBURN!!!
i don't get all these prostitute burns
There are multiple ways to interpret it, but the two ones that come to mind first are(1) The way a prostitute would "burn" (insult) her client.(2) BURN, prostitute, BURN!!!!
I get it; it's the new "that's what she said"