Review of: Alfred Brendel

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Rating:
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On 16.11.2019
Last modified:16.11.2019

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Alfred Brendel

Alfred Brendel und Peter Gülke pflegen die Kunst des Interpretierens auf einzigartige Weise: Brendel als weltberühmter Pianist, der auch Bücher über Musik. Der Pianist Alfred Brendel über Destillate, alte Schubladen und den Bonus der späten Jahre. Sein letztes Konzert gab Alfred Brendel am Dezember an der Seite der Wiener Philharmoniker. Seitdem widmet er sich dem Schreiben sowie Lesungen​.

Alfred Brendel Navigationsmenü

Alfred Brendel, KBE ist ein österreichischer Pianist. Er gilt als einer der bedeutendsten Interpreten klassisch-romantischer Musik des Jahrhunderts. Alfred Brendel, KBE (* 5. Januar in Wiesenberg, Tschechoslowakei) ist ein österreichischer Pianist. Er gilt als einer der bedeutendsten Interpreten. Der Pianist Alfred Brendel über Destillate, alte Schubladen und den Bonus der späten Jahre. Die offizielle Biografie von Alfred Brendel. Hier können Sie die ganze Bio lesen und weitere spannende Infos zu Musik, Werk und Wirken von LANG LANG. Alfred Brendel, * 5. Jänner Wiesenberg (heute Loučná nad Desnou), Tschechien, Pianist. Biografie. Anders als viele prominente Musiker. Sein letztes Konzert gab Alfred Brendel am Dezember an der Seite der Wiener Philharmoniker. Seitdem widmet er sich dem Schreiben sowie Lesungen​. Alfred Brendel und Peter Gülke pflegen die Kunst des Interpretierens auf einzigartige Weise: Brendel als weltberühmter Pianist, der auch Bücher über Musik.

Alfred Brendel

Er zählt zu den grössten Pianisten des Jahrhunderts, gilt als Instanz in Sachen Schubert. Nach dem Ende seiner Karriere hat Alfred Brendel. Der Pianist Alfred Brendel über Destillate, alte Schubladen und den Bonus der späten Jahre. Alfred Brendel und Peter Gülke pflegen die Kunst des Interpretierens auf einzigartige Weise: Brendel als weltberühmter Pianist, der auch Bücher über Musik.

He has played relatively few 20th century works but has performed Arnold Schoenberg's Piano Concerto. Toward the end of his concert career he stopped playing some physically demanding pieces, such as the Hammerklavier Sonata of Beethoven, due to arthritis.

Although Brendel remained popular and praised throughout his career, he often had a reputation of interpretative coldness.

Schonberg noted that some critics and specialists accused the pianist of "pedanticism". In November Brendel announced that he would retire from the concert platform after his concert of 18 December in Vienna, which featured him as soloist in Mozart's Piano Concerto No.

Brendel has been married twice. His first marriage, from to , was to Iris Heymann-Gonzala, which produced a daughter, Doris, who is a progressive rock and pop rock musician.

In , Brendel married Irene Semler, and the couple have three children; a son, Adrian, who is a cellist , and two daughters, Katharina and Sophie.

Next to music, literature is Brendel's second life and occupation. His books include:. A survey of pianists by the magazine Limelight ranked Brendel as the 8th greatest pianist of all time.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Main article: Alfred Brendel discography. Retrieved 3 June Retrieved 6 January Retrieved 8 November The Guardian.

Retrieved 21 November Retrieved 12 February Mozart's Piano Music. Oxford University Press. The Observer. Psychology Press.

The New York Times. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 January Retrieved 24 May Retrieved 15 October Retrieved 14 June Retrieved 24 November Retrieved 10 May The Times.

Retrieved 23 April Retrieved 11 April Here Alfred Brendel was given his first piano lessons at the age of six from Sofia Dezelic he also appeared at a children's theatre in Zagreb and had a succession of early teachers as the family moved on, returning after the War to a place near Graz where Brendel pere worked in a department store.

Here Alfred studied at the Graz Conservatory with Ludovika von Kaan who had studied with one of Liszt's more illustrious pupils, Bernhard Stavenhagen as well as private composition lessons with Artur Michl, a local organist and composer.

After the age of sixteen, the little formal training he had had came to an end. Apart from attending a few master classes he had no further teachers.

To this day, Alfred Brendel regards his unconventional musical background as something of an advantage.

Presented with a Revox tape-recorder now an antediluvian machine but still in working order , Brendel learnt by recording the piece he was studying, listening to himself and reacting to it.

At that time I composed polyphonic pieces with great pleasure, and a habit to listen to all voices implied in a composition has stayed with me.

As well as his musical activities, Brendel also pursued his other interests, including painting, composing and literature, of which literature became his second professional occupation.

At the time of his first recital there was a one-man exhibition of his water-colours in a Graz gallery. But in he won fourth prize in the prestigious Busoni Competition in Bolzano, Italy.

It was enough to launch his career as a performing musician. He then toured throughout Europe and Latin America, slowly, unspectacularly building his career, and participating in a few masterclasses of Paul Baumgartner, Eduard Steuermann a pupil of Busoni and Schoenberg, and who gave many first performances of the latter's work and, most importantly, the great Swiss pianist Edwin Fischer.

However, Brendel maintains that he has profited most from listening to singers and conductors. Later, one of his Lied partners was Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau.

Brendel remembers, "When I was young my overall career wasn't sensational at all, it rather progressed step by step. It was quite an unpopular programme, I didn't even like it much myself and the next day I got three offers from big record companies.

It seemed really rather grotesque, like a slow, hardly noticeable rise on a thermometer or a kettle warming water suddenly beginning to boil and to bubble and the steam comes out.

During the s he made his first recordings. These served to confirm his stature as an authoritative keyboard artist and, during the s, became the first pianist ever to record the entire piano works of Beethoven on the Vox label , a set which, in the opinion of one critic, contains 'some of the finest Beethoven ever recorded'.

In the s, Brendel returned to Beethoven with a complete cycle of the piano sonatas on the Philips label for which he now recorded exclusively.

During the season he presented cycles of all 32 Sonatas in the course of 77 recitals in 11 cities throughout Europe and America. No pianist since the legendary Artur Schnabel forty years before had played the complete Beethoven Sonatas at Carnegie Hall.

It was a venture he repeated throughout the world during the s and a third recorded cycle of all the Beethoven Sonatas was completed in Three years later saw the appearance of new recordings of all five Beethoven Piano Concertos in an acclaimed partnership with Sir Simon Rattle and the Wiener Philharmoniker.

In , Carnegie Hall invited him to be musician in residence with an unprecedented series of seven events in a variety of roles - solo recitalist, Lieder collaborator, chamber musician, orchestral soloist and performer of his own poems.

To mark his 70th birthday in , Alfred Brendel performed in a series of residences at prestigious concert halls in cities throughout the world, including Vienna, London, Paris and Tokyo.

Brendel's discography is now among the most extensive of any pianist, reflecting a repertoire of solo and orchestral works that ranges from Bach and Haydn to Weber to Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Mussorgsky and Schoenberg.

As well as playing a prominent role in championing Schubert's Piano Sonatas, he has recorded two complete cycles of his mature piano works, , as well as establishing Schoenberg's Piano Concerto in the concert repertoire.

To celebrate his 65th birthday in , Philips released a disc boxed set entitled The Art of Alfred Brendel. What sort of man is he, this apparently austere, intellectual musician who has dedicated his life to the cornerstones of the piano repertoire?

Sir Simon Rattle recalls that "I was right at the beginning of my twenties when I first worked with him and he's since become a very good friend.

But I can remember the first performance just thinking what he is asking me to do is so difficult and is such a stretch. I really despaired at one point that I would ever be able to.

Nowadays what he asks is just bloody difficult instead of completely impossible and we've done so much together that I think we understand each other's rhythms.

Since , he and his wife Irene have made their home in London. I think he lives with his very strong sense of the time he still has to achieve what he wants to achieve and he is very economical with his forces and his energies.

He wants to use them for what he seriously wants to do. Marie-Francoise Bucquet, a friend of the Brendels, goes further.

Fspiegel Alfred Brendel AssassinS Creed Stream als der Schubert-Interpret. Galler Tagblatt ist nicht gestattet. Tagblatt Quiz. Wie führt ein Meisterwerk vom ersten zum letzten Ton? Sponsored Content. Toggle navigation. Das Buch beglückt den Konzertbesucher wie den Profi gleichermassen. Januar in Wiesenberg, Nordmähren, geboren. Wie ist Ihr Verhältnis zum Klavier nach so vielen Jahren? Manchmal kann Bowling 2000 sich auf seine verhaltene Art wie ein Kind freuen:. Musik, sagte er einmal, beginne Molly Schade ende im Gefühl, der Verstand aber diene als Filter. Ist Applaus doch eine Droge? Seither trat er nur mehr bei Lesungen seiner Texte und bei Vorträgen über Musik auf. Toggle navigation. Was dürfen wir noch erwarten? Bibi Und Tina Online Stream Kostenlos So auch beim Meisterkurs an der Schubertiade. Zum Inhalt Zur Navigation.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Main article: Alfred Brendel discography. Retrieved 3 June Retrieved 6 January Retrieved 8 November The Guardian.

Retrieved 21 November Retrieved 12 February Mozart's Piano Music. Oxford University Press. The Observer. Psychology Press.

The New York Times. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 5 January Retrieved 24 May Retrieved 15 October Retrieved 14 June Retrieved 24 November Retrieved 10 May The Times.

Retrieved 23 April Retrieved 11 April Retrieved 17 October University of Oxford. Archived from the original on 18 June Archived from the original on 18 April Classic FM.

Retrieved 26 March Archived from the original on 23 September Gramophone Hall of Fame. Ernst von Siemens Music Prize.

Herbert von Karajan Music Prize Laureates. Igor Stravinsky Alfred Brendel's place among the greatest musicians of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries is assured.

Renowned for his masterly interpretations of the works of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms and Liszt, he is one of the indisputable authorities in musical life today and one of the very few living pianists whose name alone guaranteed a sell-out anywhere in the world he chooses to play.

Yet Brendel had a most untypical start compared to most of his peers. He was not a child prodigy, his parents were not musicians, there was no music in the house and, as he admits himself, he is neither a good sight-reader nor blessed with a phenomenal memory.

His ancestors are a mixture of German, Austrian, Italian and Slav. He was born on 5 January at Wiesenberg, northern Moravia now the Czech Republic and spent his childhood travelling throughout Yugoslavia and Austria.

At various times his father worked as an architectural engineer, businessman and resort hotel manager on the Adriatic island of Krk.

Here, young Alfred first encountered "more elevated" music. And I sang along and found it to be rather easy.

His father then went to Zagreb and became the director of a cinema. Here Alfred Brendel was given his first piano lessons at the age of six from Sofia Dezelic he also appeared at a children's theatre in Zagreb and had a succession of early teachers as the family moved on, returning after the War to a place near Graz where Brendel pere worked in a department store.

Here Alfred studied at the Graz Conservatory with Ludovika von Kaan who had studied with one of Liszt's more illustrious pupils, Bernhard Stavenhagen as well as private composition lessons with Artur Michl, a local organist and composer.

After the age of sixteen, the little formal training he had had came to an end. Apart from attending a few master classes he had no further teachers.

To this day, Alfred Brendel regards his unconventional musical background as something of an advantage. Presented with a Revox tape-recorder now an antediluvian machine but still in working order , Brendel learnt by recording the piece he was studying, listening to himself and reacting to it.

At that time I composed polyphonic pieces with great pleasure, and a habit to listen to all voices implied in a composition has stayed with me.

As well as his musical activities, Brendel also pursued his other interests, including painting, composing and literature, of which literature became his second professional occupation.

At the time of his first recital there was a one-man exhibition of his water-colours in a Graz gallery. But in he won fourth prize in the prestigious Busoni Competition in Bolzano, Italy.

It was enough to launch his career as a performing musician. He then toured throughout Europe and Latin America, slowly, unspectacularly building his career, and participating in a few masterclasses of Paul Baumgartner, Eduard Steuermann a pupil of Busoni and Schoenberg, and who gave many first performances of the latter's work and, most importantly, the great Swiss pianist Edwin Fischer.

However, Brendel maintains that he has profited most from listening to singers and conductors. Later, one of his Lied partners was Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau.

Brendel remembers, "When I was young my overall career wasn't sensational at all, it rather progressed step by step. It was quite an unpopular programme, I didn't even like it much myself and the next day I got three offers from big record companies.

It seemed really rather grotesque, like a slow, hardly noticeable rise on a thermometer or a kettle warming water suddenly beginning to boil and to bubble and the steam comes out.

During the s he made his first recordings. These served to confirm his stature as an authoritative keyboard artist and, during the s, became the first pianist ever to record the entire piano works of Beethoven on the Vox label , a set which, in the opinion of one critic, contains 'some of the finest Beethoven ever recorded'.

In the s, Brendel returned to Beethoven with a complete cycle of the piano sonatas on the Philips label for which he now recorded exclusively.

During the season he presented cycles of all 32 Sonatas in the course of 77 recitals in 11 cities throughout Europe and America.

No pianist since the legendary Artur Schnabel forty years before had played the complete Beethoven Sonatas at Carnegie Hall.

It was a venture he repeated throughout the world during the s and a third recorded cycle of all the Beethoven Sonatas was completed in Three years later saw the appearance of new recordings of all five Beethoven Piano Concertos in an acclaimed partnership with Sir Simon Rattle and the Wiener Philharmoniker.

In , Carnegie Hall invited him to be musician in residence with an unprecedented series of seven events in a variety of roles - solo recitalist, Lieder collaborator, chamber musician, orchestral soloist and performer of his own poems.

To mark his 70th birthday in , Alfred Brendel performed in a series of residences at prestigious concert halls in cities throughout the world, including Vienna, London, Paris and Tokyo.

Brendel's discography is now among the most extensive of any pianist, reflecting a repertoire of solo and orchestral works that ranges from Bach and Haydn to Weber to Schumann, Liszt, Brahms, Mussorgsky and Schoenberg.

As well as playing a prominent role in championing Schubert's Piano Sonatas, he has recorded two complete cycles of his mature piano works, , as well as establishing Schoenberg's Piano Concerto in the concert repertoire.

Alfred Brendel University of Oxford. Retrieved 23 April Sieben Nächte books include:. Ernst von Siemens Music Prize. Retrieved 6 January Er zählt zu den grössten Pianisten des Jahrhunderts, gilt als Instanz in Sachen Schubert. Nach dem Ende seiner Karriere hat Alfred Brendel. von Ergebnissen oder Vorschlägen für Bücher: "Alfred Brendel". Überspringen und zu Haupt-Suchergebnisse gehen. Berechtigt zum kostenfreien​. Alfred Brendel war als Pianist von 19Stammgast bei LUCERNE FESTIVAL. Geboren im nordmährischen Wiesenberg, entstammt Brendel. alfred brendel live.

Alfred Brendel Pianistenlegende Alfred Brendel in Vorarlberg: «Legen Sie da eine Starkstromleitung»

Leserbrief schreiben. Wenn der Flügel meinen sehr anspruchsvollen Bedürfnissen entspricht, ist es Liebe. Januar in Wiesenberg, Nordmähren, geboren. Im Herbst und Winter verabschiedete sich Alfred Brendel mit einer umfassenden Tournee vom internationale Konzertrummel, ist seitdem aber weiterhin als Autor und Dozent aktiv, der seine Vorträge auch mit eigenen Musikbeispielen Dan Brown Reihenfolge. Martin Preisser Ab und zu lacht er auch — kurz, sec, pianissimo. Wie ist es Ihnen gegangen ohne Publikum? Selbst wenn es Street Style Stream schon ein Hörgerät braucht. Alfred Brendel

Alfred Brendel Navigation menu Video

Alfred Brendel plays Schubert - Piano Sonatas D958, D959, D960 (1988)

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