Hard edged pianism, sudden long pauses, and loud climaxes were the order of the day. |
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It was followed by an explosively dazzling Liszt Hungarian Rhapsody No 11, which affirmed her purposeful and communicative pianism. |
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Here was truly happy music, and happy pianism, bright and optimistic, sensitive to the detail of Beethoven's markings. |
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Without doubt his work as a composer had a great impact upon his tremendous pianism. |
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His Rachmaninoff group brought some of the most purely beautiful pianism in recent seasons. |
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While this CD probably is intended for a more specialized clientele, few would fail to respond to the appeal of such pianism. |
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All in all, though, this CD contains provocative and often sublime pianism. |
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He is a living dream of pianism, having broken through an expressive barrier that other players do not know exists. |
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Even so, he could sweep the listener off his feet with the excitement of his pianism. |
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That, to my mind, is the most extraordinary thing about this unique disc which, I believe, any lover of great pianism owes it to himself to hear. |
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His lackluster music making and routine pianism will hardly impress anyone who has heard far superior pianists of the same age. |
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His pianism is outstanding, phrasing is supple, and rhythms are alert and buoyant. |
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So resourceful is his prismatic pianism that no line is denied its fully fluid dynamic status, assuaging each as he does with a thousand shades of affect. |
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The 24 Preludes from which his new ballet takes its name are Chopin's, nuggets of Romantic pianism, quintessential and unimprovable. |
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Nikolai Petrov was one of the giants of Russian pianism, a musician with a colossal technique and a matching appetite for hard work. |
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Brilliant and highly virtuoso recording? an unusual testament to the art of perfect pianism. |
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Ms. Melford leads from within the stir, meting out her pianism in surges or shimmers, according to the music's needs. |
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I bring up the subject of opera because it related very closely to Svetlanov's extremely accomplished pianism. |
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It was by their pianism that we were to judge their artistry. |
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In terms of pianism Mishka was astounding for a girl her age for her balancing of chords, awareness of phrasing, sense of rhythm and overall technical command. |
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Extrovert and virtuosic, he is always in control of this difficult music and his pianism is overflowing with that Russian passion which stirs both mind and spirit. |
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His sensitive pianism brought musical depth and color to the score. |
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Brilliant, poetic, masterful and miraculous are some of the words used to describe Thibaudet, who continues to be hailed by the press as the finest exponent of French pianism and one of the best pianists in the world today. |
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She sat high on her stool, and he was almost sitting on the floor, but they were well matched: patriotic anger had fired the ailing Debussy to write this work, and here it was filtered through brilliant four-hand pianism. |
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The piece opens with a stern rumble of pianism before the ensemble gives halting chase, and then tapers off into balladic terrain without relaxing its intensity. |
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Overt application of heat on one's hands is uncommon among top-ranking pianists, and there are only scattered examples of such a practice in the history of pianism. |
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The Independent on Sunday Reviewed by Anna Picard Sunday, 14 February 2010 Educated in the Soviet school of vividly coloured pianism, Alexei Lubimov brings muscularity and vision to the fortepiano. |
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The real reason was diminutive 19-year-old Benjamin Grosvenor, the Andy Murray of British pianism, who would be the youngest-ever soloist to play at the opening Prom. |
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There is nothing showy in her pianism, nothing cloying about her expressivity. |
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This is exciting, high-strung, Horowitzian pianism that is tempered by unfailing good taste, tonal subtlety, and a true sense of Lisztian style. |
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This pedagogue gave him exercises which miraculously expanded his pianism. |
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