Josef Labor Plays Beethoven
A recently discovered 100-year-old recording by a forgotten musical giant takes us back to the musical culture of Beethoven’s time.
Josef Labor Plays Beethoven Open »
A recently discovered 100-year-old recording by a forgotten musical giant takes us back to the musical culture of Beethoven’s time.
Josef Labor Plays Beethoven Open »
We recently had the opportunity to speak with acclaimed jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal about his latest release, “Ballades”. Check out what he has to say, and listen to it here.
Ahmad Jamal — “Ballades” (Jazz Village, 2019) Open »
Legendary jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal describes his musical roots in Pittsburgh, his monumental recording “At the Pershing”, and talks about the future of jazz in the United States.
Ahmad Jamal: “Everything Depends on the Repertoire That One Possesses” Open »
We are honoured to present Piano Magazine’s Artist of the Month for October: legendary jazz pianist Ahmad Jamal.
Ahmad Jamal’s Highlights Open »
The story of our duo is not the most typical — even though we are sisters, a significant age difference did not allow us to sight-read the scores in slippers in our living room in Belgrade! The duo was “imposed” on us after our respective piano studies at the Paris Conservatory. Sanja was 15, and I was 27. The Odyssey, therefore, begins in 2002, when the Belgrade Philharmonic invites us to play Mendelssohn’s Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra in E Major. Before that, we played very rarely together, only to close shared recitals. I remember discovering Schubert’s delicious Rondo in D major, D.608, which will always remain a piece we love to play.
Bizjak Piano Duo — Repertoire for Two Pianos and for Piano Four-Hands Open »
A legendary 1936 recording of a Chopin Nocturne continues to be esteemed as one of the greatest ever made.
The Inimitable Ignaz Friedman Open »
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach is a composer whose music, though admired by all of the great composers of his day, is today only infrequently heard on the concert stage or utilized in the teaching studio. During his lifetime, however, C. P. E.’s ideas about music were extremely influential. The six Württemberg sonatas, expressive and experimental keyboard works, serve as an excellent summation of C. P. E.’s aesthetic and style. Composed between 1742-1744 and dedicated to C. P. E.’s pupil Carl Eugen, the Duke of Württemberg, the Württemberg sonatas are challenging works that present the performer with a multitude of technical and interpretative difficulties. In each sonata, C. P. E. gives full rein to his creative abilities and seems to relish such difficulties as complicated rhythms, overlapping voices, extreme technical challenges, and unusual or difficult key signatures. This article discusses what makes the Württemberg sonatas stand out from among the more than 150 sonatas that C. P. E. composed over the course of his creative life, focusing on overall aspects of the set as well as significant characteristics of the individual sonatas themselves. Special attention is paid to the pedagogical applications of these works. Contrary to what has been widely assumed over the centuries, C. P. E. Bach is not a composer best consigned to the dusty annals of history but is actually a creative musician of superior ability. He influenced musical thought and composition generations to come, and his works can still speak to us today.
Emotion, Experimentation, and Education: C. P. E. Bach’s Württemberg Sonatas Open »