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Piano Street Magazine:
Toward the Flame: Boris Petrushansky’s Journey Through Scriabin’s Universe

Alexander Scriabin died in April 1915, at forty-three, of a fever that took him within a week — leaving his great mystical project unfinished. He left behind a piano language no one had spoken before, one that a century later still questions every interpreter who approaches it. Boris Petrushansky has spent a lifetime preparing his answer. In a new album and an extended conversation with Piano Street, he traces Scriabin’s path from the early Preludes to the final, shattering Op. 74. Read more

Topic: woooooooooooowwww  (Read 2115 times)

Glissando

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woooooooooooowwww
on: December 21, 2004, 12:54:12 AM
I found MeiTing's website and downloaded some of his MP3s- a Ravel and some Scarlatti.
wooooooooooooooow
You are so good!
Hope I can be as good someday! :)

Offline thracozaag

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Re: woooooooooooowwww
Reply #1 on: December 21, 2004, 01:22:38 AM
  The boy definitely has skillz 8)

koji (STSD)
"We have to reach a certain level before we realize how small we are."--Georges Cziffra

Offline SteinwayTony

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Re: woooooooooooowwww
Reply #2 on: December 21, 2004, 04:49:53 AM
I KNEW that name was familiar. 

A while back I used to download amateur pianists' recordings on MP3.com.  For some reason the site went defunct now, but I remember I had recordings by him for Rachmaninoff 23/5 and Chopin 25/12.  Both had mistakes all the over the place, but very good performances.

Offline chromatickler

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Re: woooooooooooowwww
Reply #3 on: December 21, 2004, 04:57:25 PM
  The boy definitely has skillz 8)

koji (STSD)
i feckin CONCUR  8)
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Piano Street Magazine:
“The Sound Always Comes First” — Andrea Bonatta on Teaching Liszt

Why tone matters more than speed, why reading Goethe matters as much as practising octaves, and how a single insight can transform a performance. Italian pianist and scholar Andrea Bonatta has spent decades exploring the contradictions of Franz Liszt, from performer to man of faith, virtuoso to poet. Here, in conversation with Piano Street at Liszt Utrecht 2026, he shares his vision. Read more
 

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