Martin wrote:
"A listmember recently calling Robert Bonfiglio a "talented novelty harp
player" is nothing short of hilarious."
I couldn't agree more. That may be the single most misinformed statement
I've ever read on Harp-l in 6 years.
Martin went on to say:
"Horowitz never had to play with his ass, like Jerry Lee Lewis, nor juggle
with the Steinway. He went over just fine anyhow."
I once saw Jerry Lee Lewis at Carnegie Hall....and he opened with a Chopin's
Prelude in E minor (op.28 No.4) . The Killer playing Chopin!!! LOL The
contrast was hilarious and the audience "got it". He gave it a good shot and
had fun doing it. I think he's great, but he's no Horowitz.
Steve Merola
Or could we reach a stage where we just play the damned thing like,
say the piano is played? Get it looked upon like a "real instrument"?
Horowitz never had to play with his ass, like Jerry Lee Lewis, nor
juggle with the Steinway. He went over just fine anyhow.
Despite the mealticket argument probably the first step would be to
treat the instrument in the most, well ... -- conservative manner. No
chit-chat about the size of it ("Oh whadda LARGE piano you have, Mr
Horowitz"), no fun stunts, no "virtuoso" tricks, no lowering of the
level. Just good solid playing in whatever genre or tradition.
Could take some time -- attitudes are sticky things -- but could be
doable.
Martin, I think you're on to something here!
/ Mikael
Mikael B�ckman
ha...@weinzatwork.com
Floragatan 8
941 51 Pitea
Sweden
ha...@weinzatwork.com
http://www.myspace.com/johnhenrytrio
http://www.weinzatwork.com
http://ramblinminds.com/