Marguerite Long: The Grande Dame of the French Piano Tradition

French pianists often seem to fall short of achieving the level of success on the international stage that Russian—or perhaps even German or Italian—ones do. Two notable exceptions to this “rule” were Alfred Cortot and Samson François (a student of both Cortot and Long). Both were iconoclasts who, while doubtless benefitting immensely from their pedagogical tradition’s thorough training, also rebelled against its obsessions with the notions of jeu perlé and plus de clarté and gained a wider global recognition in the process. Marguerite Long was the doyenne of the quintessentially French style of piano playing that emphasized finger independence, litheness, evenness, volubility, and lightness avant tout. In a pianistic world that often hails men for blustering through virtuoso repertoire, Madame Long’s brand of rarefied feminine elegance has sometimes been myopically dismissed as superficial outside France—by those who’ve listened to her playing at all, that is.  [Continue reading . . .]

Clifford Curzon: Prince Among Ensemblists, Serf Among Soloists

Clifford Curzon was much revered as a chamber-music performer, and rightly so, but his solo discography is relatively small. The vast majority of his solo recordings were made for the Decca label and run a wide gamut in quality, regrettably tending toward vapidity. He does tend to get things off the ground far more in his live performances (mostly recorded for the BBC at various venues in England), though these recordings are few and far between.  [Continue reading . . .]

Josef Lhévinne: The Taciturn Perfectionist

For a pianist who is held in such high esteem by cognoscenti, Josef Lhévinne recorded little, even by comparison with other great artists from the pre-high-fi days of yore such as Ignaz Friedman, Josef Hofmann, and Moriz Rosenthal. The sparseness of his recorded legacy is perhaps partly attributable to his uncompromising perfectionism, coupled with a diffident personality that lacked the chutzpah of a more aggressively self-promoting performer like Vladimir Horowitz or Arthur Rubinstein. In addition, Lhévinne’s career as a soloist was sometimes overshadowed by his reputation as a pedagogue with a long-standing teaching position at the Juilliard School alongside his wife Rosina. (Among the Lhévinnes’ more notable students were Van Cliburn, Adele Marcus, and John Browning.) Nowadays even some of his more devoted admirers seem to forget that Lhévinne was also once a traveling concert artist with a hectic touring schedule. [Continue reading . . .]