Friday, July 25, 2025

Chopin Preludes

 So what are people's favorite Chopin complete prelude recordings?


This is a set that fascinates me, addicts me, far more than it inspires love. Being almost the exact length of an LP record, it reminds me greatly of a perfect album of popular music, like The Beatle's Rubber Soul, or The Immortal Otis Redding. If anything, I'm more certain of the art in The Beatles, a group in which, as to call the Pope Catholic, there is considerable artistic value.

There's absolutely nothing wrong with pop music, it's just that like so much popular music, it's a set of pieces that have an almost complete lack of irony and emotional ambiguity, and that's something we all need at times. The ambiguity in the Chopin Preludes comes from the juxtaposition of such different expressions in the same set of pieces.

Like popular music, the value, the art rather than entertainment, comes from the skill and humanity of the performer. Some performers, great performers, don't have it. There are great pianists I simply have to shut off before the end, because I find their expression of these pieces irritating, insipid, completely bereft of substantial emotional meaning: even pianists as great and deep as Arrau and Schiff have little of value to contribute to these pieces: Arrau being simply pretentious in his Arrau way, while Schiff is atypically unnuanced and bland.

My single favorite is a very hard to find live recital recording from 1973 by Mieczyslaw Horszowski, then in his early eighties. He takes a full 40 minutes of complete emotional vulnerability. Tatyana Nikolayevna is similarly wonderful for the same reason.

Of the early recordings, I especially love Raoul Koczalski, who was the pupil of Chopin's closest pupil, and perhaps got his interpretation from the horse's mouth. He plays alternate versions, does rubatos nobody else does yet also plays parts straight-no-chaser like the E-minor prelude which is a good 50% faster than nearly everybody except Andras Schiff's extremely mediocre video recording.

What Koczalski represents, and he's hardly the most extreme example, is the old Chopin tradition. What Artur Rubinstein called the 'swan-dive' approach. Rubinstein is the point at which we arrive at the second half of Chopin interpretation, after which Chopin style is no longer inherited like mother's milk. Pianists of Rubinstein's generation grew up with Chopin in their ears, not only from their lessons but as listeners: hearing their mothers practice these works every day. Rubinstein was a towering Chopin player, but whether he was the cause or the bellweather of the change, his impact on Chopin performance was calamitous. After Rubinstein's massively distributed recordings comes a terrible bifurcation, from which the tradition is lost, and everyone is either as modern as a corporate office building or romantic in a way that defeats the purpose of romanticism.

What the great Chopinists of Rubinstein's generation did was not pointlessly mannered, like the great Italian tenors singing Verdi, every liberty was taken for the purpose of elucidating something important in the music: a rubato to emphasize a half-cadence followed by an entirely new color pallete for the new key, a hand-break to emphasize the notes of a particularly dissonant chord, special accents to emphasize an important counter-melody that would otherwise be lost in the texture. As one former friend used to say to me, they 'tell a story' with the music.

After Rubinstein, all that was lost. A number of great romantics tried to get it back: Arrau, Richter, Pires, Sokolov, Pogorelich, (just speaking of the Preludes here), and yet, contra some famous critics, they didn't know how, and it all just sounds distracting from the music. Certain stars with transcendent gifts like Horowitz and Argerich were able to recapture the greatness of Chopin on their own terms, but in manners that inevitably emphasized their interpretations more than the music itself. On the other hand you have those modernist pianists who, as Richter said, 'cast Chopin in bronze' like Pollini and Ashkenazy, and sadly, Schiff (or Michelangeli who casts Chopin in broken glass). What is this music under them? Is it great music or just a mass-plaster rendering of it? Meanwhile, many of the greatest musician/pianists who might have intuited the style clearly thought Chopin vulgar and did not make Chopin a priority in their repertoires: Firkusny, Kraus, Brendel, Lupu, etc... Even Lipatti, who has a glorious feeling for the rhythmic lilt of his waltzes and the colors needed to illustrate his harmonies, operates at base from a modern sonority of cast-iron that gets in the way of Chopin's beauty (ducks from oncoming fire...). So not even the alleged greatest lost pianist of history can recapture the glories of the tradition during the years the grand tradition was fading.

But then we have those early recordings: Hofmann, Friedman, Koczalski, Moiseiwitsch, Novaes, Horszowski, Cherkassky (a bit later but he was a Hofmann pupil), Long, Meyer, who studied with Polish and French piano artists immersed in the Chopin tradition, studying with those who knew Chopin or the pupils of those who knew, and passed the secrets on (we'll get into my heretical thoughts on Cortot another day). Thank god, we have five of them doing the complete prelude set, and each of them are extraordinary in different ways.

Is the tradition permanently lost? Well,,, not quite. We still have Krystian Zimerman. You don't have to be Polish to play Chopin properly, but it can't hurt. Doubtless there were still teachers obscurely crawling around Poland who knew 'how to make the music go.' His ballades are positively visionary, like Furtwangler's Wagner, Bernstein's Mahler, Corelli's Verdi. Those rambling near-improvisations are not my favorite pieces, except when played by an ecstatic like Zimerman or Hofmann, at which point you hear exactly what's missing. Then there's the curious case of Ivan Moravec, whose nocturnes I have serious doubts about. Yet his preludes, my god, they are playing of such fragile vulnerability and tenderness. You feel embarrassed, as though you're intruding on a stranger's moment too intimate to let you to see (what might Lupu have done with these pieces?). His much touted sound is a little too percussive for Chopin, yet what matters that in the face of those incredible pianissimos which fade away to nothing? Perhaps it's all a little too much. The great Chopinists of yesteryear put far more fun into the works, but this is surely the hurt that Chopin meant to express. I still haven't heard new Chopinists of great regard like Rafal Blechatz and Jan Lisiecki and

Here, in bad sound (though it gets better as it goes along), is Horszowski doing the greatest prelude of all at the Vatican in 1940! A born Jew playing the Vatican amid the Shoah? It's unheard of.

What do people recommend?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUlrlysEKQk

Horszowski's complete Preludes has disappeared from youtube.

In its place may I first suggest Shura Cherkassky? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1F1oo7e85E

Then Raoul Koczalski: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhfmiuVSnDw

Then Ivan Moravec: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUlrlysEKQk

Then Benno Moiseiwitsch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gborhb6z3To

Then Artur Rubinstein: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J4TspTbU7i4


Then Guiomar Novaes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyO9sUsZcwc



As Horszowski played until he was 100, here is his Raindrop Prelude in a much more modern performance: Chopin: Prelude Op. 28, No. 15 in D flat major

...maybe I do love this music....


Wednesday, July 23, 2025

135,000


So I don't like quoting Bret Stephens. He almost personifies that strain of neoconservative Jewish nationalism that's going to get every Jew killed. Every era has their Bar-Kochbas and Rabbi Akivas who imagine us all having greater power and ability to get away with more than we really have, Stephens is just one of a hundred or two major public figures in 21st Century Jewish-American discourse who make me scared as shit.

But he was right about something crucial this week: if it's a genocide, why is the total not much higher? If Israel wanted to actually murder Gazans, they could have mowed Gaza down to the last child two years ago, and yet the total seems to stand at 60,000. Mass murder? Sure. War crimes? Absolutely. Democide? I don't think you can deny that. Gross negligence? There should probably be a thousand soldiers thrown in jail for decades.

But genocide? Well... we'll see who we can count on these days.

It's not the fault of those who started parroting the charge in recent weeks. I don't hold them antisemitic or remotely as responsible as people who were making the charge two years ago. It takes a formidable mental strength to withstand 2025's blitzkrieg of propaganda, whether from Palestine or from Israel or from anywhere else in the world. If I weren't Jewish, I don't know if I could have withstood it. We all would like to think that we would have come to the same conclusions were we from a different background. Bullshit. Politics is identity. It is far from only identity, but you can only perceive the world from inside your own head, which is formed by facts about yourself and your life history. There is something resembling an objective truth about all of us, but it's much too complex to perceive all its dimensions.

But if the total goes over 135,000, and it very well could, and if some evidence turns up that the total is reliable, then we are in very, very different territory. The standard for what constitutes genocide has gone down and down over the decades. As I've written a number of times, the term 'genocide' was created to define the Holocaust. There was no term for the enormity of what happened, and for the probable murder of a total resembling 60,000 in a territory of 2.1 million to be termed equivalent in a place to a much larger territory of 6 million out of 7 million Jews is absolute shandeh und a kherpah. A shame and a disgrace. The genocide experts who claim it should be discredited forever.

Nevertheless, it is Jewish history's most infamous chapter in two-thousand years. This now has nothing to do with October 7th, this is a war of choice that even the majority of Israeli military experts are against. The death toll before Rafah, which a large part of the Israeli military warned against, was 35,000. It should have ended there. The total now is currently 25,000 since Rafah. When it hits 100,000, the total of unnecessary deaths will be 65,000. When we get to 135,000, it will be a total roughly equivalent to Germany's Ponary Massacre in Lithuania and Babi Yar in Ukraine. Those particular massacres were not necessarily genocides; included were a sizeable quotient of Ukranians, Lithuanians, Poles, Cossacks, and native Russians, but they are the most disgraceful form of mass murder. And if famine becomes a weapon of this war, we will be pursuing the tactic of Stalin against Holomodor, the death by starvation of 8 million in Ukraine, including God knows how many Jews. Even if not it's a genocide, and if it kills a couple hundred thousand I don't know how it can be denied, if it hits 135,000, this is so greater a shandeh und a kherpah than that perpetrated by our accusers that history shall remember it a deed as infamous as the annihilation of native tribes in the land of Israel, as documented in the Tanakh (Old Testament). Leaving aside any moral considerations, it is as dangerous to the Jewish future as any of the most disgraceful moments in the Bible.

Perizzites, Hivites, Jebusites, Amorites, Amalekites, Canaanites, Gazans.

Chant that litany to yourself. How does it sound?

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

Why Are Pianists Better Musicians than Conductors?

I've obviously been listening to a lot of piano music lately, and the more I listen, the more I realize that among the greatest pianists we hear a level of musicianship that we almost never get from the greatest orchestral conductors. Rubato, agogics, shading, phrasing, rhythmic emphasis, it's always tied to the phrase, the harmonic changes, the phrase lengths, the pulse, the architecture of the piece. It's not as common in recent generations as it used to be. Many of today's romantics are putting these affectations all over the place without reason, while many classicists think no ideas at all are a substitute for making the work come alive. But the whole antiromantic movement happened because there was plenty of excessive affectation in the romantic era too.

Part of the problem is that for all the talk of conductors being in control, orchestral music is inherently collaborative. Conductors depend on their musicians, and unless the conductor wants to drain the inspiration from the musicians through excessive instructions, there are only so many demands one can make unless you're working with the same musicians on the same piece every other year for twenty-five years. Soloists have as much time to hone their interpretations as there are days in a year. Conductors can spend years preparing, but ultimately they have about three hours.

Music is so hard. Composing music still harder, but at least composers are thought of inherently as great artists. It's entirely deserved, but the question remains, are the greatest performers great artists?

I'm probably the wrong person to answer this question since my thoughts about what constitute great art are so atypical. It's not enough to make us feel imposed, to 'wow' us, even with sublimity. There has to be a human, heart-to-heart experience that makes us feel the entirety of existence's tragicomic state.

I feel as though I get that from an enormous amount of pianists, I do not get that from an enormous amount of conductors.

I have a sad feeling I know why that is. Conducting is not a profession that lends itself to great humanity. There are great humans in this profession, like my choir's conductor, Brian, who is now a member of this group, everybody say hi! But many conductors are in it more to impress the audience than to move them. They create their interpretations as much by their galvanizing force as any musical insight, and that's reflected in the performances. Impressed we duly are, but cleansed of our emotional anguish we too often don't feel.

With too few exceptions, orchestral music is just not intimate enough to make us leave the concert hall with a lower emotional temperature, and as you get older, you need that more and more if you want to live longer. Thrills are great for being young, and thrills can still be great as we age, but man does not live by thrills alone. As magnificent as Beethoven's 9th is, it can only get you so far before you need op. 111 or the Heiliger Dankgesang.

The greatest artists, I say again and again, combine polar opposites: tragedy and comedy, down-to-earthness and spirituality, angelic warmth and demonic fire and ice, grandeur and intimacy, moderating classic proportions with romantic extremes of expression. They may take you to extremes, sometimes opposite extremes, but they always lead you back home.

This is not the way of Toscanini or Furtwangler, nor Karajan and Bernstein. Of the four, I'll definitely take Lenny, but these are not artists you look to for particularly intimate experiences. Lenny may be intimate at times, art in its ideal state goes back and forth between intimacy and grandeur with us never knowing which side it will end up. Lenny generally deals in primary emotions. In Lenny's world as a conductor, everything is what it sounds like, happy is happy, sad is sad, anger is anger, and love is love (this, btw, is nothing like his compositions, which are full of that multi-dimensional irony). I compare him to contemporaries like Kubelik and Fricsay, even Gunter Wand, and none of those three throw their listeners so headlong into such obvious emotional states. They all make us feel the emotions, but they always 'leave a little in the tank' so we can understand that we have to feel every emotion in the context of the emotion that comes next.

That journey is ultimately what I look for in art. All things balanced by their opposites. Are the great recreative musicians the equivalent of Mozart and Beethoven? Of course not, but they work just as hard at their particular profession, and they are able to achieve all their aspirations. If that's not great artistry, what is?

Must be deceased or retired:

Probably Great Artists (in only my opinion... today) among Conductors: Monteux, Walter, Talich, Klemperer, E. Kleiber, Busch, Mitropoulos, Fricsay, Kubelik, Kegel, Tennstedt, Rozhdestvensky, Jansons, and...?
Very Close: Koussevitzky, Casals, Beecham, Munch, Horenstein, Steinberg, Barbirolli, Kletzki, Schmidt-Isserstedt, Beinum, Jochum, Mravinsky, Cluytens, Wand, Vegh, Kegel, Skrowaczewski, Pretre, Davis, Haitink, Dohnanyi, C. Kleiber, Abbado, ... at least four of these are begrudging (reserve right to bump some of these up)

Undoubtedly Great Artists (in only my opinion... today) among Pianists: Rachmaninov, Levhinne, Hofmann, Schnabel, Rubinstein, Moiseiwitsch, Hess, Horszowski, Haskil, Kempff, Novaes, Kraus, Grinberg, Solomon, Curzon, Firkusny, Richter, Wild, Gilels, Lipatti, Presler, de Larrocha, Katchen, Fleisher, Badura-Skoda, Gulda, Moravec, Brendel, Kovacevich, Pires, Lupu, Freire,

Very Close: E. Fischer, Serkin, Kapell, Istomin, Kocsis, Egorov

More than Great Artists: Walter, Talich, Klemperer, E. Kleiber, Busch, Kubelik, Fricsay, Kegel, Tennstedt, Rozhdestvensky, Rachmaninov, Schnabel, Moiseiwitsch, Hess, Horszowski, Kempff, Kraus, Grinberg, Firkusny, Richter, Gilels, Presler, Fleisher, Moravec (a little begrudgingly, doubts will lift soon), Lupu

Obviously Casals and Vegh fall into this category too, but not for their conducting.

Monday, July 21, 2025

The Ironies of Gershwin

 There's a youtuber I love named Vlad Vexler. A Russian emigre to Britain roughly my age, a philosopher and musicologist whose most important subjects are Isaiah Berlin and Edwin Fischer - basically, me-bait. Most of his content at this point is about the Ukraine war, and he is unapologetically liberal in outlook. But he is unashamedly elitist (much too much so) in musical tastes. He declares with brazen self-assurance that there are 'four great pianists': Edwin Fischer, Cortot, Kempff, and Brendel. In one video he ripped Simon Rattle, whom he calls 'one of two great conductors working today' (Ivan Fischer), for wasting his time on 'third-rate music like Gershwin...'

Look. Forget Rhapsody in Blue, forget American in Paris and Porgy and Bess. The real Gershwin is not in what we hear with orchestras, the real Gershwin is the songs. There are literally hundreds and they're some of the greatest songs ever written.
When you hear Verdi and Puccini, the meaning of the arias is so earnest that it can't be mistaken, they are not only tied to specific situations, but they state their meaning so ardently that they cannot possibly mean anything but what they say they mean. To a lesser extent, Chopin is the same way and Rachmaninov is that way almost always.
But Gershwin... Gershwin is Mozart, Gershwin is Schubert, Gershwin is Faure and Bizet. It's music better than it can be performed (and it's usually performed badly). Contained within its ironies are an infinity of meanings. What is the 'fascinating rhythm?' Is it sex? Is it work? Is it illness? Is it anxiety? Is it motherhood? Whenever Ira Gershwin's lyrics state (all too often) 'who could ask for anything more', the truth is that the singer usually is asking for more, and through the music we can picture all the things being requested.
Jazz is, by its nature, a language of irony. If Jewish Klezmer music conceals happiness within minor key music, jazz generally conceals sadness within major key music. You hear those ambiguities permeating the immortal music of Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, but Gershwin, who coded all sorts of Jewish melodies within his jazz *, was the American virtuoso of laughing through tears. Listen to those achingly long chromatic suspensions in 'The Man I Love", every sequence is practically its own opera of transitioning emotions - contentedness, heartbreak, anger, hope, sadness, acceptance, and sex moistening every chord all the way through.
I loathe, really loathe, these souped up easy listening orchestrations. Who can possibly find the challenge of this music within that bed of strings and deafening brass blare? But the fact is, Ella Fitzgerald is the Gershwin songbook. Within Ella's arch, barely noticeable ironies you can hear every drip of melancholy, celebration, and insincerity. Her singing defines 'similing through your tears.'
  • Those Jews among you sing 'It Ain't Necessarily So' to yourselves and then 'Baruch Atah Adonai' while chanting the Aliyah and ask yourselves...

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

The Complex Morality of Taste: Part 1?

So... I got blocked by a good 'internet friend' out of nowhere for the second time yesterday. Twenty years ago we met in a record store in Israel where he worked, went to bars to drink, smoke cigarettes, and talk classical records. Twice when I visited Israel I went back to the record store to see if he worked there, but he'd disappeared. Nobody who worked there even seemed to know who he was. I figured that was the last I'd seen of him until facebook tracked him down. And then for years we talked music for five hours at a time, multiple times a week, well into the middle of the American night.
We differed on everything. His top 5 were Bach, Verdi, Monteverdi, Wagner and Strauss. Mine were Schubert, Brahms, Beethoven, Janacek and Mahler. He loved opera above all. My great love was orchestral music. He loved performers that kept things crisp and rhythms strict. I loved performers who kept things a little loose. He valued form and transparency, I valued detail and character. He thought the performer's job was to stay out of the way. I thought the performer's job was to find the meaning. He wanted every chord evem, I wanted inner voices brought out. He loved sororities that gleaned, I loved sororities that glowed. He thought making big dynamic contrasts got in the way. I thought dynamic contrast was the lifeblood of music. He loved the gleam of Lipatti and liquid of Haskil, I loved the glow of Lupu and the flow of Firkusny. He loved Erich Kleiber and Igor Markevitch, I loved Bruno Walter and Rafael Kubelik. He loved the Staatskapelle Dresden, I loved the old Concertgebouw. His favorite Verdi was Don Carlo, mine was Otello. His favorite Wagner was the Ring, mine was Meistersinger. He loved Furtwangler's Rome Ring. He loved Baroque music, I loved early modern. I loved Furtwangler's Ring from Milan. He loved period instruments, I was ambivalent. He loved old recordings for thir sonorities. I loved them for their freedom. He loved La Scala Verdi from the 20s. I loved Met Verdi from the 30s. His favorite singers were Callas and Lili Lehmann, Christian Gerhaher and Hans Hotter. My favorites were Vickers and Chaliapin, Christa Ludwig and Elisabeth Soderstom and... for eight years I managed to conceal a love for his enemy singer #1: Elisabeth Schwarzkopf.
But we differed so much that there were always things to talk about and excitement whenever we agreed.
Where we agreed above all was Mozart. He was practically above both our Top 5s. We spent multiple hundreds of hours analyzing every measure, every harmony, every phrase length, every instrumental doubling and vocal color. But even there, his favorites were Idomeneo and Magic Flute, my favorites were Seraglio and Figaro. He preferred the piano concertos, i preferred the Sinfonia Concertantes and the piano sonatas. He loved Mackerras and Gardiner, I loved Harnoncourt and Davis. He loved Haskill and Anda, I loved Lili Kraus and Casadesus. He loved Brautigam and Badura-Skoda, I loved Moravec and Gulda. He loved the beauty, I loved the irony. He loved how Mozart looked back. I loved how Mozart looked forward.
There was always mutual respect between us, until there wasn't... When we met he'd have no idea I struggled with mental health, and I had no idea he struggled still worse with it. Last time this happened I said some absolutely unforgivable things which then got published in the private music group I run and was mass shamed, I owned up to it by saying still more unforgivable things and humiliated myself in front of a hundred people. A year later I sent an apology to him, was forgiven instantly and the friendship resumed as though nothing happened. Then it happened again yesterday...
This time I won't be nearly so egregious, I'll just put it in an essay...
The issue, as last time, was just taste, aesthetic taste, which this guy views in moral terms. You'd be surprised how many crazy people on the internet do, and he's hardly the worst of them. Internet message boards creep and crawl with malodorous malcontents of malice causing mayhem. Dig an inch deep and he's the opposite of malicious, he's just hurting badly and refuses to believe there's any help for it.
The internet attracts lonely people and deepens loneliness. To pass the time, lonely people develop obscure interests that make them still lonelier and find each other on the internet seeking like-minded individual. But by defintion, like-minded individuals are as mal-adjusted as them, and therefore deposit their full neuroses onto each other. Never visit any message board or comment section if you're a well-adjusted person. It will only make you despair of humans and worsely adjust you to the world's condition.
But let's face it, there are a lot of reasons for the world to make you crazy, and even the stupid among us will notice them all the time. The world has a lot of consolations, but they're consolations on top of a world we did not ask to be thrown into, which gives us all lifetimes' worth of frustration.
There are a finite ways of dealing with that frustration. One is love, one is hate, one is sadness, one is anger, one is envy, one is fear, one is confusion, one is surprise, one is work, and one is 'interest.'
Over the course of a lifetime, we all fall into each category; but still more than love, being 'interested' is the easiest rabbithole to fall down, because being interested in something means understanding why we're frustrated by everything that doesn't interest us, and there is a paper thin line between interest and addiction. There are wholly bad addictions, like substance abuse, and then there are 'good' addictions, or at least 'potentially good', like the subjects whose investigation gives us satisfaction: those subjects can be anything from sports, to art, to politics, to science, to technology. They can be just as destructive as the 'bad' addictions, but just as moderate use of mind-altering substances can cause temporary happiness, so too can our interests give us satisfaction at times that borders on bottomless, and causes a joyful enthusiasm that infects from us to others.
But how is it that our satisfaction with a subject becomes something we care about so deeply that we cause the opposite of satisfaction, both in ourselves and others? Just as unmindful relationships can cause awful ugliness, so too can unmindful interests. Just as love is more powerful than us, so are our interests. None of us dictate our mind's thoughts without herculean effort, not even the best of us; and just as thoughts of other people can control us if we're not careful, so can the subjects which interest us. There is such a thing as caring too much, and it causes us to pin too many expectations on something we always have to let be itself. We have to let the subject be the subject, and not be us. To view ourselves as indivisible from other things or people is to misunderstand them, and warps our perceptions of them into something they aren't.
With any subject, we always have to be mindful: 'what if you're wrong?' What if our beliefs are wrong? What if our sense of selves are warped by them? What if we pin all our hopes on things which disappoint us? What if our beliefs distort our sense of right and wrong into something unrecognizable from the basic precepts?
That never means to stop being hopeful, it never means to stop celebrating when our convictions are validated, it never means to give up on the anything we're attached to so long as we can reasonably guess it will hurt people less than the alternatives, but it does mean that growing too attached to our convictions can result in frustrations exponentially compounded. Love the attachment, never grow too attached. Always trust, but verify.
So forget about people for a moment, forget about politics or science, let's just talk about subjects that are matters of taste. It's just the arts, it's just sports, it's just tech. It's not human beings themselves. We pass the time with these things that give us pleasure, but put too much stock in the subject and the pleasure turn to anguish. Leave the anguish to the professionals of the things which interest us. The people who disagree with us are not evil, they're not stupid or blind and deaf, and they're only malicious to the extent that they believe the rest of us are.
But at the same time, our convictions are our convictions, and it's very hard to convince us otherwise. Convictions evolve, but if they remain the same from year to year, they're addictions, and if they change wholesale overnight, they're still addictions. Nobody changes overnight. We are 99.9% the same people from day to day, and we're all prisoners of what we believe, whether right or wrong.
-----
So there's this guy a lot of you know: very short, red-headed, slightly balding, big nose and an underbite, has trouble with posture, recently lost a lot of weight because he's sick and burps all the time, speaks his mind too much but pretty funny, has a lot of esoteric interests that make him seem snobbier than he is, inclined to be too pessimistic for a satisfied life but he's working on it.
His four core beliefs are:
1) an antiquated form liberalism that comes from 1948: reform over revolution, regulated capitalism over socialism, establishment of greater rights without retribution against those who denied them, the necessity of foreign interventionism and nation building but always under multilateral auspices. Human progress that can only begin from the bottom up, but always must be directed and channeled by the top.
2) Judaism without God. As his father said 'There is no god, and He gave us the Torah at Mt. Sinai.' A Judaism of ritual and custom, which is tempered by realistic beliefs about the world. About matters of God, trust God. About matters of the world, trust the world.
3) While old notions of culture can never save the world, a decent appreciation of it helps. You can't reject a culture you know little about.
Those three beliefs may eventually change, but he came by them hard earned and they aren't changing any time soon.
But above all 4)
Reject the transcendent system, the cause that affects everything for the better: be they spiritual solutions like monotheism (including Orthodox Judaism) or material solutions like socialism or libertarianism, the transcendent possibility is statistically impossible. Such a system may exist, but the chance that YOUR system is THE system is one in a trillion.
So what then does it mean about culture and taste that you reject the transcendent system?
Who knows? All art is bullshit anyway.
But what he does know is that those works of art which promote a transcendent system are generally not his cup of tea. Neither are those works of art which advocate overthrowing a transcendent system. His timid temperament looks at them both and thinks 'trouble.' He can't help noticing that secure eras that provide for a more prosperous future are more inclined toward celebrating works of art that depict human beings realistically, and are more interested in their foibles and folly.
He's not nostalgic for the repression and anxiety of the 1950s, but he is nostalgic for how the ascetic 50s laid a foundation for a brighter, more fulfilling future, a foundation which our demands for instant results can destroy.
It doesn't always work like that, the 1950s was as much the age of Bradbury and Asimov as it was Salinger and Nabokov, as much the era of Kerouac and Burroughs as it was Cheever and Capote, as much Ellison and Baldwin as T.H. White and E.B. White, Herman Wouk and Leon Uris as much as Bellow and Isaac Bashevis Singer, Shirley Jackson and Ayn Rand as much as Flannery O'Connor and Harper Lee. All these fiction writers existed in tandem, and it wasn't a complete given that the populist books would outsell the more traditionally literary ones.
It was an era when Leonard Bernstein, Miles Davis, Ray Charles and Johnny Cash could all exist as part of the cultural conversation in rough parity, and even if you didn't like all four, you weren't considered a completely up-to-date person if you didn't know what all four's music sounded like. So the difference is that for all the lambasting of mid-century 'monoculture', it arguably remains the most diverse, dynamic culture the United States ever had. No one form of culture completely subsumed the other. We think of the 1950s culture as controlled by the Motion Picture Association and the Recording Industry Association of America, and yet if it was a cultural dictatorship, the dictatorship did a better job promoting diverse voices than today's democracy. Today, there is nothing like that censorship, yet Pop and Hip-Hop dominate the music industry completely. All our best known rock bands are nostalgia acts from the 20th century, while even country music fanatics agree that the best country music is well in the past. As for Jazz and Classical, forget it... If there are new musical geniuses working in those two fields, who would know except a couple thousand colleagues?
Why was this era so much easier for every cultural demographic to have some kind of voice? He thinks it's because, in some ways, the ambitions were much smaller. Nobody sought to dominate the market, and those who did always made a just a bit of room for the 'little guy' who wouldn't sell a hundred thousand records, on the belief that eventually the sales would recoup the costs, even if it took a few decades. Nobody tried to sell 50 million copies of anything. Nobody even thought those sales possible.
And that ethos is reflected in the fiction, it's reflected in the music, it's reflected in the movies. It may not have been the most challenging stuff ever made, but it was enough. Even the guys who wrote about certain forms of transcendence: the Bradburys and the Tolkeins, wrote works which seemed to defend a modest ethos. Earthlings colonized Mars and then regretted their colonization. Hobbits were adventurers who just wanted to go home. Around the corner were romantics who overthrew this classical ethos and advocated complete revolution: Dylan, Kubrick, Vonnegut, Carlin, Cassavetes, Didion, Mailer, Peckinpah, Lenny Bruce, Hunter S. Thompson and Ken Kesey, Morrison and Hendrix, Le Guin and Frank Herbert, Philip Roth and Erica Jong, Bonnie and Clyde and Easy Rider.
And American culture grew ever more insular, ever more cut off from Europe. 50's intelligentsia were besotted with Bergman and Kurosawa, Fellini and Antonioni, Camus and Zhivago, Glenn Gould and Vladimir Horowitz, Picasso and Stravinsky and Nabokov. With every decade, America paid less and less attention to Europe, and a corresponding influence from East Asia was still fifty years away.
We all think of the fifties as being one of America's most exclusionary decades, but in many ways it was our most inclusive, and it was inclusive because everybody seemed to believe in free choice. Even if the freedom of choice wasn't particularly free, even if everybody seemed to freely choose the same ways of life, even if there was enormous pressure to conform, the belief in freedom of choice was at least as important as the reality. Compared to the tyrannies of Europe, 50s America was freedom itself, and therefore it was a culture that celebrated freedom.
We are freer today than the 1950s by every metric, yet everywhere we are in chains.
We are in chains because we no longer believe in freedom of choice. We think we do, but ask anybody in America what they think of people who disagree with their fundamental principles and you're at least as likely to get a symphony of vituperation as you are a novel of nuance. Hell, ask anybody around the world.
The internet gives us more choices than the 1950s would ever know what to do with. It's put the most advanced learning and erudition online for anybody who wants to pursue it. 125 years of recorded music and movies are there for anyone with for fifteen dollars a month, the entire contents of libraries and museums are there for our purusal.
Do we take advantage of it? Hell no! We're arrested by the tyranny of choice. We are all alone, mastering knowledge of our small slivers of the world's knowledge so that we master one particular sub-sub-subject, knowledge which is a mile deep and an inch wide, and therefore we have no idea how to talk to anyone whose knowledgde is different than our own. The world has no idea how to process all that information, and somewhere in our minds, the thought occurs, if that much information is available so easily, is it really worth that much?
And therein lies the seeds of destroying it all. Therein lies where fake knowledge proliferates: pseudoscience, conspiracy theories, doctored photos and bots. Therein lies the fake culture of AI that can pose as human creation. There is so much knowledge and culture that it can be imitated by falsity, and created with an eye to pander to our brains by being easily understood.
--------
Most works of art are pretty neatly divided between the real and the unreal. The rational stays rational, irrational stays irrational. People generally consume one or the other, while ever more people of our day choose to consume tales of the irrational almost exclusively.
What this guy we know minds about the irrational is not that he thinks its intelligence inferior in any way, but he fears such works contain a kind of serious danger. It seems to him that so many irrational works call to us with messages of violence and destruction: Game of Thrones and The Terminator, The Ring of the Niebelung and the Divine Comedy, even a lot of the Bible. They all have many things to say about morality, but they don't tell us much about what it's like to be us. They're stern, judgmental, and exhort us to rash, ruthless action. They preach destruction and let us take a voyeuristic delight in watching it happen. So much modern science fiction seems in love with dystopias, so much modern music seems in love with violence. These works can be inestimably great, but the era that produces them is usually announcing bad news about the next era.
So that being said, there will always exist these works of much greater ambition, and this guy is not such a stick in the mud that he's immune to its charms. Part of human folly is that we all crave magic. We all need experiences of the irrational, there are works of fantasy, legend, science fiction, even sacred texts, replete with magical transfigurations that he swallows with magical delight and enthusiasm. He finds it harder in those genres to find things he thinks are truly great, but when he finds them he wonders if they're even greater than the realistic ones he so supposedly prizes.
To make just a small list of movies of this type, let's include, say: Pan's Labyrinth, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, Who Framed Roger Rabbit?, The Wizard of Oz, Pinocchio, Close Encounters & ET, Children of Men, Arrival, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Her, WALL-E, Metropolis, Everything Everywhere All at Once, La Jetee, A.I., Brazil, even a few pretentious movies he doesn't like could fall into this category like A Clockwork Orange and Stalker.
These are a very specific type of fantasy or sci-fi movie. What he loves in these movies is that they use non-human means to illuminate properties of humans that are extremely elusive, and perhaps could never be illuminated without them.
What do they illuminate? The human relationship to the irrational, which is an enormous, and underrepresented, part of the human experience. And not just of the irrational, but the human relationship to the ultimate irrational of our time: technology.
We are bonding closer and closer to technology we in no way understand. The technology is invented through rational means, but for 99.99% of us, the means may as well be ancient spirits. If we want to understand it, we need so much more of this particular kind of irrationally rational art that illuminates how the irrational affects we fools who fancy ourselves rational.
---------------------
I believe in art, I believe in quality, I believe in good taste.
I think works of art which advance values of destruction and exclusion can be of inestimably towering quality, but they will always be in bad taste.
I believe that art can make us better people, but never will if only consumed for its own sake. Like any pursuit, art has to be tied to values, and those values have to be creation, not destruction, inclusion, not exclusion, drawing in, not keeping out.
But the paradox is that what makes art art is omission, distortion, refraction. We have to be mindful that in its natural state, art is as value neutral as any tool. The omissions of art can omit entire facets of the human experience and flatter small islands of people to fancy themselves righteous at the expense of everyone else. It all depends on the intentions of the person who picks the tool up and the receptivity of their audience.
But at the same time, art is not a tool; it's a basic human compulsion, necessity and right. It is as much part of the human experience as family, work, emotions, sex and death. In so many ways, art is how we process them all.
There is a lot more to this subject... I'd like to get to it tomorrow or Thursday. Who'd have thought this question would be so complex?

Saturday, July 12, 2025

The Blurring of Chopin

Chopin is not my favorite composer. His music is deceptively complicated, but his expression is simple. He expresses primary emotions. Like any decent writer should, my everyday listening is to composers whose emotions are complicated: Brahms, Schumann, Schubert, Mozart, Faure, Vaughan Williams, Bartok, Mahler, Shostakovich and Beethoven.
I have written about my problems with Chopin before. I've always felt you could hear his well-recalled snobbery baked into the music. It's music for the 'in-crowd' who have the luxury and good looks to constantly pursue romantic affairs. Brahms is for the nerds, Chopin is for the cool kids.
There are certain great composers, particularly among romantics, whom I've always felt have written with an eye to the mass market. There's nothing wrong with the mass market if that's to whom you want to appeal, but if that's whom you want to appeal to, the appeal must be instant, further contemplation can be pursued, but it is not required to appreciate its appeal, and it ultimately must not challenge or confront the listener. It is a forerunner of the 20th century's popular culture, and in that sense, Chopin is a composer of popular music, Verdi is a pop composer, Liszt is definitely a pop composer (not the late stuff in either case of Verdi or Liszt...), even Schubert wrote many lieder with an ear to the mass market. Even Mozart wrote a work as towering as The Magic Flute with an ear to giving the public exactly what they wanted. Obviously certain composers wrote who are still thought of as 'pop': Rossini, Offenbach, Johann Strauss, and that's what they meant to be.
There is nothing wrong with popular music. In so many ways, it's harder to make great entertainment than great art. Art may forgive technical sloppiness, entertainment rarely does because if it's seams show, it doesn't entertain. Furthermore, just as there are many classical composers who aim for entertainment as much as great art, there are many musicians from popular genres who aim for great art as much as entertainment. Anybody who denies the title of 'great artist' to Miles Davis or Charles Mingus, Leonard Cohen or Tom Waits, misunderstands art.
But one of the great advantages of pop music is that it depends far more upon the individuality of the performer. Every time you hear a Chopin nocturne on two recitals in close proximity, every time a new singer takes a major role mid-run of a Verdi opera, it's a completely different piece. Listen to five performers do a Chopin nocturne, the emotional meaning of the piece can become unrecognizable from performance to performance.
When Rubinstein does Chopin's B-Flat Minor Nocturne, it's almost completely metronomic, but he finds a new color for every chord change, and the phrases expand and contract with coital eros. It is sexy, it is cast with magic, it is wafted with perfume. When Maurizio Pollini does it, he follows the score quite closely (though not entirely) and takes the metronome marking of 116 to the quarter literally (did Chopin do the MM's or was it an editor?), and sometimes pushes a strigendo quite beyond the marking. Forte and fortissimo markings are truly loud, and frankly so are the piano and pianissimi. Like most things Pollini, I find it a frustrating performance. It's not a bad performance sadly I find Moravec truly bad and boring and I love many things Moravec does (note: on second hearing it's not bad, but the dynamic contrasts are marginal except at the end and the rubato yo-yos all over the place for flimsy reasons. Where are the soft colors Moravec is famous for? Where's the vocal line?), but Pollini breaks the hypnotic spell so many times that he clearly doesn't mean for us to feel anything erotic. Perhaps it's meant to be an essay in frustration, tragedy, pathos, even rage.
But then you get to Arrau, and suddenly the work becomes as complicated and nuanced as anything in Schubert and Brahms. He teases out every possible meaning, emotional, harmonic, rhetorical. He finds an essay's worth of ambiguity. It would take a day of writing to explain how and why. I don't know if the work is inherently as complicated as Arrau makes it, but I know that when Arrau performs it, he makes it into a work of great art.
There is always the question of how to play Chopin. Ever since Rubinstein, there's always been a desire to 'clean Chopin up' from the oral traditions and make him musically respectable. It was great when Rubinstein did it, he was drenched in the long Chopin tradition, and even without the characteristic rubati, his Chopin still sounded like Chopin, only more meaningful.
But if it's the Chopin cleanup you get from Pollini, Ashkenazy, Perahia, forget it, even Schiff, whom I love, what does Chopin mean in their hands? I often find it sterile, generic muzak, little different from a second tier composer like John Field. And then you have all those pianistic flavors of the month over the years who play Chopin with no interpretive barnacles and still manage to make the music vulgar.
And yet, who can deny that so much Chopin playing is drowned in vulgarity?
Take, for example, Chopin's first Scherzo. Even so many of the greatest pianists treat it as a virtuoso exercise: early Richter, Pletnev, Pollini, Ashkenazy, even Josef Hofmann! It's all just a blur of notes to show off how fast they can play, but usually there's so much pedal you can't even tell that. Then they slow down so melodramatically that the rhythmic pulse is completely lost and momentum grinds to a halt.
Yet listen to the opening figures, particularly in the left hand (bass). It's an exercise in rhythmic ambiguities: 2 against 3 against 6 against 12! This is the Chopin of genius who is so much greater than the music he's known for.
But then you hear the one pianist synonymous with empty virtuosity: Vladimir Horowitz. Horowitz may have lit too many fireworks, but empty he was not. He was a genuine musical mind, and like many great instrumentalists and conductors, settled for their instrument after a youth of wanting to be a composer. Whatever one feels about Horowitz's propensity to inappropriate thunder, there are so many details in a Horowitz performance, more than nearly any other pianist. So many that we'd find him fussy and pedantic were he not such a sensational virtuoso.
Horowitz disobeys practically every marking, piano where Chopin marks forte, forte where Chopin marks piano, with jabbing accents and a sound in fortes that's probably three times the volume Chopin had in mind. But the left hand is absolutely clear and he barely uses the pedal, and consequently brings out just about every rhythmic ambiguity in the piece. Here you finally realize the absolute kinship with the Mephisto Waltz (you know which one). He changes tempi when Chopin calls for it, but he never drops to a turtle crawl, and no matter how much rubato, the pulse and line are absolutely clear and almost never broken. If broken, as in the transition back to the recapitulation, it is always to a purpose.
Score or not, this is great Chopin playing sounds like; catching Chopin's exact mix of popular vulgarity and sublime genius. If this is what Chopin is, then there is no reason not to love him beyond reason.

Arrau's Nocturne https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EKlonPJnypI

Horowitz's Scherzo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CXFdgc5p_o 


Thursday, July 10, 2025

Human Comedians

 So: in my opinion, the greatest artists, creative and recreative, are 'human comedians' who treat seriousness with humor and humor with seriousness. That's how you get Mozart and Schubert and Brahms--Beethoven and Schumann at their best. Etc. Etc. Etc.

Since I've been talking about piano lately, let's talk piano. First of all, there are those pianists beyond mortals whose talents break the scale. There is no way to measure the quality of pianists like Rachmaninov, Josef Lhevinne, Hofmann, Cortot, Friedman, E. Fischer, Gieseking, Arrau, Horowitz, Richter, Lipatti, Kapell, Ogden, Argerich, Pollini, Sokolov, young Fleisher. Their most important quality is their uncanniness: the inability to hear them without disbelief that such things are possible on earth. Like Bach and Wagner, or Beethoven in heroic mode, Schubert and Mahler in their tragic modes, these are artists so gifted and powerful that they launch past the human. I like many of these pianists and dislike a number of them too, but criticism means nothing in the face of them because it's like an ant critiquing a cyclone. You do not get their superhuman strengths without their limitations. Though even among them, there are surely those who lose no human qualities among their superhumanity: Rachmaninov, Lhevinne, Lipatti... Does that make them the three greatest of all time? Well... there's an argument to be made. I might add a few surprising later pianists to that list: Gulda, Yuri Egourov, Hamelin, even Fazil Say, and there may be a whole new generation of these giant pianists coming up. We'll see.

But then you get the human comedians. Not necessarily giants (though a few come close: like Schnabel, Rubinstein, Lupu), but humans who practice art's highest calling: to figure out what it means to be a (&**%^% human being. To explore seriousness and play in equal measure, compassion and contempt, judgement and mercy, external and internal, dance and song, and integrate between these poles so as to provide a balance sheet that locates where truth lies. I've listed these pianists so many times that I don't feel the need to do it again.
Whether in music or any art, the most sublime purpose is to uncover life's multidimensional polyphony of expresssion. This is why great art rewards further contemplation than the initial experience. This is art's ultimate purpose and where I find lie the most meaningful experiences.

But I have to list, because the best I can do to illustrate to illustrate my bullshit syllogism is offer clips that may or may not show what I mean. Never the mind the details of how they play, just focus on the complicated, nuanced emotions they might make you feel.


Artur Schnabel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RV8yluxHXm4

Artur Rubinstein: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KLscY15Z0r0

Benno Moisewitsch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0jN-gl4ryo&list=PLMeOYP-ZXc_3n3ZMR251z0Ck4KcsElvxq&index=12

Guiomar Novaes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zBubTPbv6EE

Solomon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDj6U0nHJ9M

Lili Kraus: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Iwx6gOjtaeo

Clifford Curzon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oAhIjl4u954

Shura Cherkassky: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-gMklGePdU&list=PLMeOYP-ZXc_0T_5JJ8UcDKP_OI9NFBCg2&index=73

Rudolf Firkusny: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgmC9gwU4is

Eugene Istomin (how did I forget him?) Piano Sonata in D Major, D. 850: II. Con moto 

Leon Fleisher (old): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fdCf2dSTvMo&list=PLrZpHCu1Z8H6MCpqDPkSg45pcBdN1mk0w&index=8

Paul Badura-Skoda: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eW_0UQu2ug

Alfred Brendel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aTdpcPA7S8

Stephen Kovacevich: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXAPfMhykS8

Maria Joao Pires: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J7OEVFBMpmk

Radu Lupu: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w4nnjhHe15U

Nelson Freire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTC3TwYpjB0

Krystian Zimerman: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-GrRQz8pk

Stephen Hough: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0XVgLZ8dVQ

Helene Grimaud: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ac7XtxUXn54

Leif Ove Andsnes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aecvdNPJeqM

Lars Vogt: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wty50EN5xY

Paul Lewis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ot4vxMtAh3A

Consider these the S-Tier pianists as it were who pursue what I take to be the supreme goal of art, or something... there are a number who come close: Haskill, Kempff, Casadesus, Serkin, Bolet, Gilels, Moravec, par examples, but I find a few human elements missing in each. Not many, but enough that I feel one doesnt quite hear a whole human experience in their playing.

It's not possible to express what this all means or how it works without going into much further detail, and even if I did, it would still read as bullshit to many.

The pianists I first mentioned in a >S-Tier category, a place beyond humanity. What does our humanity matter in the presence of giant natural phenomena? Even so I'm not sure these pianistic giants are either greater or better.

One day perhaps I'll rank musicians with no <S tier and see where these giants land while taken to task for their limitations.