I classify her as a Level 8 out of 10.
Here's my thread
She's probably in the same tier as Lang Lang, Yuja Wang, and Buniatishvili.
Errrm.....
Lisitsa is not close to Yuja by any means, and I agree similar level of Katia. I have very ambivalent feeling about Lang Lang - he is capable of producing literally everything what one can imagine on the piano, but his playing seems to my most of the time childlish. Especially encores are often beyond the border of a good taste.
She made her fan base on technical skills and good videos. Kudos to her for gaining such popularity, but I have to agree that while her playing is absolutely lovely to watch and is technically of highest possible skills, than indeed she is missing emotional part.
When you will through Yuja recordings, she is not “one style pianist”. It may be hurtful for the Valentina, but I think Cziffra Bumblebee of Yuja has more music than most of VL recordings. YW is maybe not always up to expectation of her being absolute breathtaking genius, and of she plays anything step lower than this we tend to underrate her. But listen to her Chopin f-minor live (Found it somewhere on youtube). It is ungodly good, it there is anyone who could match especially the 2nd part, is Zimerman.
And, bywhatever means, we should never ever compare pianists whom we know mainly from their 60+ recording, with young (25-35) pianists. There is whole life experience, which is between the performances is two groups, and while both of them have their merits, those young sound young.
We know Horowitz, Arrau and other playing mainly from being old. There few exceptions like Kapell, Lipatti and Francois, who died quite young, but besides those three I cannot find any other pianists to be remembers today and not live long.
I was reading here that Arrau was playing slow and his technique was hard to listen. This shows only how small one’s knowledge and understanding of pianism and history it.
Both Arrau and Horowitz played life with ungodly fast tempos in their young. Just listen to Vladimir’s rendition of Rach3 with Barbirolli. I do not how he was able to do full concerto in this tempo. Really. Arrau always was telling that you should play publicly at half of your maximum possible tempo. Both of them had their very own, individual technique, producing unparalled sound, by which everyone was thrilled.
As for Yuja – if you want to know how good she is, than there is recording of her having masterclass on Tchaikovsky PC1. When she starts to play, she alone sounds as full as the student and his accomppianist together.