Episode 48 - The Piano Files with Mark Ainley

3 years ago
194

Thank you Mark Ainley! Mark is THE go to guy when it comes to historical piano recordings. His knowledge and appreciation for the great artists of the past (and present) is top notch. This episode is special. Consider listening with a pen and paper so you can write down names and note the recordings that are mentioned here. It'll absolutely increase your appreciation and love for great piano music.

Here are some recordings for you to reference:

Ilona Eibenschütz talks and plays: Reminiscences of Brahms (1952)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLGIRHCPqN4

Carl Friedberg teaches and plays Brahms Ballade in G Minor Op.118 No.3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HLW-rO8fPuU

Ignaz Friedman Mazurka, Op. 7,3

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tpmWQ6t5iTM

Jan Smeterlin plays Chopin 3 Mazurkas

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pu9QUiGupA

Josef Hofmann, piano - Beethoven - Sonata in C# minor, Op. 27 No. 2 ('Moonlight') (1936 - complete)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0xMzbfy_1g

Solomon plays Beethoven Moonlight Sonata (1945 recording)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HK__kS2R3-w

Rachmaninoff plays Rachmaninoff: Newly Discovered Recording

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3Xp2Djqh3s

Listen to a lecture given by Mark here (includes recording clips):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zKo6zBtg9QM

Subscribe to his Facebook page here:

https://www.facebook.com/ThePianoFilesWithMarkAinley/

His website is here:

https://www.thepianofiles.com/

Mark Ainley is an internationally recognized authority on the art of piano playing and historical recordings of great pianists. His clear insights provide important details about the mastery of the pianists of the past and present through his magazine articles, blog and social media pages, CD productions and liner notes, and lecture-demonstrations.

Mark’s work in the field of historical recordings began in his late teens, when his pre-university writing and research on this topic won the admiration of Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times music critic Harold Schonberg. His first CD liner notes, for VAI’s release ‘Liszt: The 19 Hungarian Rhapsodies Played by 19 Great Pianists’, were co-authored in his early 20s with International Piano Archives founding president Gregor Benko, coinciding with Mark’s pioneering work in discovering previously unpublished recordings of the legendary pianist Dinu Lipatti. His internationally acclaimed efforts led to the world premiere award-winning release of over two hours of ‘unknown’ performances by Lipatti, among them piano concertos by Liszt and Bartok.

Mark’s articles about Lipatti for International Piano Quarterly, International Piano, and Classical Record Collector magazines, as well as liner notes for the labels APR, archiphon, and Opus Kura, have debunked myths surrounding the life and art of this legendary musician, and he has received support for his work from some of the Rumanian biographers, diplomats, and producers who have worked for decades in publicizing this musician’s legacy. Mark has also written in both International Piano and Classic Record Collector magazines about the great French pianist Marcelle Meyer, the muse of Le Groupe des Six in 1920s Paris who additionally worked with Ravel, Debussy, and Stravinsky.

Mark has given lectures at the Manhattan School of Music in New York, the Leschetitzky Society in Tokyo, and the San Francisco Conservatory, speaking about Great Historical Recordings in general and about Dinu Lipatti specifically, and was featured on WNYC radio in New York City in 1992 for the premiere broadcast of some rare Lipatti recordings. In September 2010, Mark co-chaired the panel discussion after the screening of a documentary about Dinu Lipatti at the Besancon International Music Festival, and the following month he opened the 2010 Great Romantics Festival with a presentation entitled “Schumann—The Poet of the Piano” for the bicentennial of Schumann’s birth. In 2016 the Romanian Cultural Institute in Bucharest sponsored a trip for Mark to visit Romania and lecture about Dinu Lipatti in conjunction with a new Lipatti website; Mark additionally appeared on Romanian TV and radio on this trip. He also presented at the Romanian Cultural Institute in Vienna in 2017 to mark the beginning of Lipatti’s centenary that year.

Mark’s international research has led to meetings with many musical luminaries, among them Elizabeth Schwarzkopf, Yehudi Menuhin, Hugues Cuenod, Franziska Ackermann (widow of conductor Otto Ackermann), Stephen Hough (who has referred to Mark’s blog in his own for The Telegraph), Idil Biret, the family of Marcelle Meyer, Lake Como Piano Academy director William Nabore, and renowned artist manager Jacques Leiser.

Mark has most recently written in International Piano about the evolution of Alfred Cortot’s playing as heard through his recordings, in addition to a centenary tribute to Dinu Lipatti. Previous articles in International Piano include features about the challenges facing young pianists as related by Jacques Leiser, an interview with British-Canadian pianist Valerie Tryon, and biographical articles about Dinu Lipatti and Marcelle Meyer. Mark has also published an extensive 9-page article about Dinu Lipatti for Classical Recordings Quarterly, and for Clavier Companion magazine has produced an article about recording producer Walter Legge, a feature on the ‘rediscovered Romantic’ pianist Jascha Spivakovsky, and interviews with Stephen Hough and Livia Rev. Mark continues his research into the life and recordings of Dinu Lipatti and has prepared a commemorative website devoted to the artist at dinulipatti.com .

Mark has been a regular guest lecturer in both Sara Davis Buechner’s and Corey Hamm’s piano literature classes at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC, and he guest lectured at Manhattan School of Music in April 2017. He is available for writing projects such as CD liner notes, articles, and interviews, as well as lecture-demonstrations on a variety of piano-related topics. Amongst his repertoire:

In The Groove: An Introduction to Historical Recordings
Dinu Lipatti, Prince of Pianists
Marcelle Meyer, Muse of Les Six
The Great Romantic Pianists
Legendary Chopin Interpreters
‘Live, from New York…’
Fabulous French Pianists
Unknown Greats
Off The Record: Rare Unpublished Recordings
Additional topics available on request.

For booking inquiries, please write to mark@markainley.com

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