Karl Miller:
>There has been a long tradition of composer pianists in the history of
>music. One need only to mention Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, Rachmaninoff,
>Prokofiev, Medtner, Casella, Bartok, and even some relatively recent
>Russians like Ovchinnikov (for me a pretty good conservative composer),
>Khrennikov, et al. But when I think about recent times very few names
>come to mind.
>...
>In short...and I hate to say it, but is Nanes the last in the long line
>of composer/pianists?
Not at all. Lowell Liebermann, for one, is a piano virtuoso (although
I don't always care for the music he writes). There's also a young
Russian perhaps-genius whose name escapes me (I confuse her with Tatiana
Rankovich). She's not only a piano firebrand and a very interesting
composer, but she's apparently a fine Russian poet. And who could forget,
once heard, Aubrey Fitch? Rzewski also comes to mind. Would you also
consider Earl Wild, or is he a mere composing dabbler?
In short, I don't think the breed is yet extinct, although it does seem
a lot rarer than it once was.
Steve Schwartz
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