bebopbob Posted June 15, 2021 Report Posted June 15, 2021 I came across two mint Lp recordings of Ervin Nyiregyhazi on Columbia Masterworks from the 1970s. A bit heavy on the keyboard but intriguing. Any thoughts on these recordings or on this pianist who according to preliminary on-line search had a very promising career but encountered some significant personal and professional hurdles dying in relative obscurity in the 1980s after a brief period of fame with these recordings. Quote
JSngry Posted June 21, 2021 Report Posted June 21, 2021 Haven't heard them, but from your description, I thought he was going to be a younger guy. Not even... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ervin_Nyiregyh%C3%A1zi I'm intrigued by this comment: Critical reaction to the recordings was sharply divided, with some claiming to hear an authentic 19th-century pianist (Harold C. Schonberg wrote, "some critics wonder if Franz Liszt had been reincarnated"[15]). Others denounced Nyiregyhazi's "incredibly slipshod" technique, "ridiculously amateurish" fortissimo playing,[16] "glacial tempos and total dissociation from contemporary performance styles. But Romantic revivalists were enthralled."[ Which begs the questions...who ever heard Lizst play to made this assessment? OTOH, why should he be "informed by contemporary performance styles"? I read stuff like this and wonder what is anybody actually hearing. what is really happening, or want they think they want to hear happening? Quote
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