Bert Bailey wrote:
>I'm puzzled by the criteria for inclusion in this series.
I assume you mean the 100-volume set from Philips. You are not the first
to be curious about the criteria, though in general they did a pretty good
job overall I think. The sheer size of the thing helped ensure scope.
>Specifically: why isn't Marc-Andre Hamelin (b. 1961) represented?
Though one can never discount the power of politics in such things, in
the specific case of the omission of Hamelin, I suspect it had may have
been primarily about licensing. The project, a joint undertaking between
Steinway & Sons and Philips, was able to do extensive cross-licensing of
material on other major labels. Obviously, getting material from Universal
labels (such as London, DG, etc.) should not have been much of a problem,
but I believe they included material from other majors as well, such as EMI
and RCA. I don't believe they had similar agreements with independent
labels. Hamelin has recorded for Hyperion, Isba, Helicon, New World, Fleur
De Lys, Altarus, SNE, Music & Arts, and probably a few others I've
missed. This is far outside the scope of the labels involved.
>A musiclover from this list guessed it's because he's too young.
I wouldn't be surprised if that was also a factor. As you point out they
did include Kissin (Sony & RCA) and Pletnev (DG, EMI & Virgin), but that's
probably because their recordings were more easily available. Then Kissin
and Pletnev probably have a much larger fan base too. And, of course,
Hamelin's is not a Russian pianist, so that's another mark against him
right there. :-)
>Also, would anyone recommend their favourite(s) in this series for me?
I suppose that depends on where your interests lie. Among many others,
the two John Ogdon volumes are perhaps necessities.
Dave
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