Steve Schwartz responds to me: >> What an overweening - and usually incorrect -- assessment of the >> taste of "dedicated fans of Chopin". > > This is why "I don't presume to speak for them." And, yes, I have heard > Michelangeli and Solomon. My quarrels are with the "multitudes of > others." My point was that having been a classical piano enthusiast for 65 years now, I have rarely found a "dedicated fan of Chopin" who really goes for the "cheap thrills". Presumably your experience must differ greatly. I am very surprised, and apologise for my assumption. Yes there are some people who like Chopin played this way, but in my experience they usually also 'Wallow in Wagner', 'Bathe in Brahms and Bruckner' and are quite uncritical, so that they can hardly be called 'dedicated fans'. And yes there are piano-players who go for cheap thrills. I am a bit too old to go to concerts much of late, but in broadcasts one can recognise the offenders and rapidly switch off. What do you make of Schumann's remark that some Chopin pieces -- I think the scherzi in particular--- are 'cannon covered by flowers?'. (I must apologise for the approximate quotation but I am without my reference books until September). One must place this together with the 'worship of Bach and Mozart' which you rightly mention. Perhaps I should add that my own taste is fairly eclectic: I even like some of Pletnev's Chopin. However I am a heretic in that the post- war Rubinstein does not attract me at all. Neat, pretty, skilled, yes: but no real feeling, chaste or otherwise. Compare for example his 'Berceuse' with that of Solomon. Or the Aflat polonaise. Or the Fminor fantaisie. Best wishes, Ernie Smart *********************************************** The CLASSICAL mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software together with L-Soft's HDMail High Deliverability Mailer for reliable, lightning fast mail delivery. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html