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4.0 out of 5 stars
Like "Art of Piano," could be better, but worth owning, Feb 21 2004
This DVD makes a nice supplement to the "Art of Piano" documentary. Both could have been longer and both could have had more depth. But at least this one has some of the breadth that the former misses. An interesting introductory section on the development of the piano and the virtuosi who played it give the rise of 20th century pianism more context. We see some woderful clips of Cortot, Brailowski, Landowska (not really a pianist, but interesting nonetheless), Myra Hess and Rudolf Serkin. We get information we never had in A of P, such as how Hofmann made the very first piano cylinders ever, for Edison, just days after he perfected his recording device. We get a recording (the only one, barely distinguishable) of the voice of Brahms, made by Thomas Edison!! We get more of Arrau than we did in A of P. Strangely absent from *both* productions is the man many consider the father of 20th century pianism, Artur Schnabel. The disc also comes with a tacked-on bonus: Claudio Arrau performing one of his specialties, the Beethoven G Major Concerto, with Riccardo Muti and the Philadelphia Orchestra at the Academy of Music. While I am a big admirer of Arrau, this performance was near the end of his life and he was not in top form. Muti makes the fine Philly Orch sound like an anonymous house band, for what's what they mostly were in his hands. The performance is enjoyable, but not essential. The documentary's narrator, David Dubal, is stiff and wooden (and dig that jacket!). He's not the best host, and tends to read every line as though it were portentous and profound, but at the same time, he's no worse than the grating narrator on the A of P. The structure of the documentary is odd: after starting with the deaths of Horowitz, Arrau and Serkin, stating that they were the end of the great Romantic era of piano playing, we flash backwards to the beginning. We then work back to the three pianists who began our story, so it seems that we're wrapping up after them. But no, the filmmaker then inexplicably tacks on about five minutes of black and white footage of Van Cliburn, never even mentioned till then, performing his signature piece, the Tchaikovsky Concerto. *Then* the documentary ends! ... Even the Paderewski, though from the same concert, is of different works. The Hofmann is the same only because this is the only footage extant of the man. Horowitz is seen performing the same Scriabin Etude from the same concert (his famous televised Carnegie Hall recital of 1968) in both, when there is plenty of Horowitz footage out there. One minor complaint is no dates for any of the footage is given in either the documentary or the booklet. This is definitely worth owning, especially when there isn't really another way to see most of this footage. My usual criticism applies--it could have been longer and featured lengthier excerpts from the musicians and less pompous yacking from the dour Dubal. (Don't *tell* me about a pianist's singing pianissimo or thunderous octaves, let me HEAR them.) But it isn't like this subject area has lots of competition out there on DVD, so grab this.
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