logo
5 Highlights From the Pianist Alfred Brendel's Sprawling Career

5 Highlights From the Pianist Alfred Brendel's Sprawling Career

New York Times18-06-2025
The classical music industry valorizes sweeping range, favoring artists whose programs cross centuries. But the magisterial pianist Alfred Brendel, who died on Tuesday at 94, was of the old school, focusing his long career on a small number of canonical composers from the same era: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert.
He nurtured their works with almost spiritual diligence, performing and reperforming, recording and rerecording. Scholarly and eccentric, acute in essays as well as in concert, Brendel rose from obscurity in Austria to become a best-selling, hall-filling star. His extended period under the radar perhaps contributed to his confidence in his idiosyncrasies: both his rumpled onstage manner and his fearless deployment of a sound that could be cool, even hard.
That sound was part of Brendel's resolutely lucid approach to music. Avoiding the impression of milking scores for excess emotion, he gained a reputation for intellectual, analytical performances. Some found his playing a little dry, but others heard a kind of transcendently austere authority.
Here are a few highlights from his enormous discography.
Haydn
Brendel championed Haydn's and Schubert's sonatas at a time when not everyone placed those pieces at the center of the pantheon. You can hear some of his flintiness of tone in the Presto from Haydn's Sonata in E minor, the feeling that he's poking at the notes. But the livelier passages alternate with slightly, alluringly softened ones, for an effect of unexpected complexity in fairly straightforward music. His fast playing never seems dashed off; he is always palpably thinking. And his diamond-sharp pointedness in the opening of the sonata's Adagio second movement eventually travels toward mysterious tenderness.
Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This Artist Has Big Feelings About Indian Weddings
This Artist Has Big Feelings About Indian Weddings

New York Times

time19 hours ago

  • New York Times

This Artist Has Big Feelings About Indian Weddings

When Rajiv Menon opened his contemporary art gallery in Hollywood, Calif., in February, it was a tumultuous period in the art world in Los Angeles, with many galleries shutting their doors amid the wildfires that had devastated the city. Mr. Menon knew the timing was risky, but he was determined to create a space to showcase perspectives from South Asia and the diaspora. 'It was driving me crazy how that wasn't happening on the West Coast,' Mr. Menon, 36, said. 'We're seeing one-off artists here or there, but never is the work contextualized.' The opening for Rajiv Menon Contemporary brought out around 400 people, from art fans to community members in the area, including the writer Jay Shetty. Since then, the gallery has become a cultural hub for conversation in Los Angeles, as one of the few spaces in the United States to specialize in contemporary South Asian art. The gallery's new exhibition, 'Why Did I Say Yes?,' which opened to the public on June 28, features the work of Viraj Khanna, a visual artist from Kolkata, India, who primarily works with textiles. The exhibition, curated by Mr. Menon, examines the global phenomenon that the Indian wedding has become. 'Indian weddings have a very plumbable role of soft power of introducing people to different elements of Indian fashion, of Indian music,' Mr. Menon said. 'All of it happens through that vehicle, and I think that really has become the major point of cultural exchange between India and the West.' In his work, Mr. Khanna, 29, frequently explores topics around conspicuous consumption, excess and social media anxieties . The Indian wedding felt like the perfect grounds to explore those forces, he said. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Rachel Zegler Delights in an ‘Evita' for the Masses
Rachel Zegler Delights in an ‘Evita' for the Masses

New York Times

time19 hours ago

  • New York Times

Rachel Zegler Delights in an ‘Evita' for the Masses

'She's a diamond in their dull gray lives,' sings the Argentine president Juan Domingo Perón of his wife in 'Evita,' Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's sung-through musical about Eva Perón. She was a former matinee star whose popularity among the working classes bolstered support for her husband's government, and 'Evita' expresses some skepticism about political populism. Yet a new revival, directed by Jamie Lloyd and running at the London Palladium through Sept. 6, is emphatically populist in its relentless bombast, heavy symbolism and button-pushing grandiosity. The initially moody staging — industrial gray metal stairs, smoke effects, dark costumes — belies the sensory overload ahead: Balloons are popped; lights are turned up blindingly bright; blue and white confetti rain down on the audience. Rachel Zegler ('Snow White' and 'West Side Story'), making her West End debut, is a delight in the title role, strutting bossily in a black leather bra and hot pants while a chorus — representing soldiers or ordinary citizens — cavorts elaborately around her to a brassy tango-inspired soundtrack, delivered by an 18-piece band. (Choreography is by Fabian Aloise, lighting is by Jon Clark and set and costumes are by Soutra Gilmour.) The show begins and ends with Evita's death from cancer, at the age of 33, in 1952. In the intervening two hours she is goaded and reproached in song by Che (Diego Andres Rodriguez), a wisecracking Everyman in a black T-shirt and cargo shorts, who teases Evita for cozying up to an authoritarian leader and sleeping her way to the top. In one song he quips bitterly, 'Don't you just love the smack of firm government?' (For this impertinence, he is later killed — doused with fake blood, then with blue and white paint, the colors of the Argentine flag.) Evita is portrayed as a cynical, ruthless social climber, and the audience is invited to sympathize with the people she hurts along the way. She unceremoniously dumps a boyfriend — the tango singer Agustín Magaldi (played with hangdog charm by Aaron Lee Lambert, who sings beautifully) — once he has ceased to be useful to her. And she breezily steals Perón (James Olivas, physically imposing but stiff — and thus convincingly military) from his girlfriend (Bella Brown), who sings a doleful song before vanishing, never to be seen again. Much preshow hype surrounded Lloyd's decision to stage the famous scene in which Evita sings the show's signature tune, 'Don't Cry for Me Argentina,' on the theater's exterior balcony; members of the public see the spectacle in the flesh, while theatergoers make do with video footage beamed onto a big screen in real time. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Lena Dunham ‘Intentionally' Stepped Back From Acting, Public Life After ‘Girls': ‘All I Got Was This Lousy PTSD'
Lena Dunham ‘Intentionally' Stepped Back From Acting, Public Life After ‘Girls': ‘All I Got Was This Lousy PTSD'

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Lena Dunham ‘Intentionally' Stepped Back From Acting, Public Life After ‘Girls': ‘All I Got Was This Lousy PTSD'

After nearly eight years, Lena Dunham will return to TV this July with 'Too Much,' a Netflix rom-com she created with husband Luis Felber. The 'Girls' helmer said her long break from television was done by design. 'I definitely took an intentional break,' she told The Times in an interview published Saturday. More from TheWrap Lena Dunham 'Intentionally' Stepped Back From Acting, Public Life After 'Girls': 'All I Got Was This Lousy PTSD' Amazon's 'Fourth Wing' Loses Showrunner Moira Walley-Beckett, Jac Schaeffer Eyed for Adaptation Kelly Ripa Jokes About Taking 'Very Indecent Photos' With David Muir's ABC Portrait, Calls Him 'Commander Handsome' 'Squid Game' Season 3 Becomes First Show to Debut No. 1 on Netflix Across 93 Countries With 60.1 Million Views Dunham made a name for herself in the early 2010s, when she created and starred in 'Girls' for HBO. By 2013, she had made the Time 100 list of the most influential people in the world. 'Girls' became a cultural juggernaut for HBO, earning them 19 Primetime Emmy nominations and two wins. Dunham, however, frequently found herself at the center of criticism and controversy. The writer/actor was repeatedly attacked online for her writing, commentary and appearance. 'I didn't really understand how to distinguish between what was and wasn't necessary for the public,' Dunham said. 'I felt confused about how I was supposed to respond.' The frequent backlash, for reasons both in and out of her control, began to weigh on Dunham who said the constant public apologies for her comments was an attempt to show who she was on the inside. 'I thought if I explain properly who I am, or give a glimpse of who I am, people are going to have a different perception of me, that we would be friends. But no one cares — and that's fine. I always joke that I need a T-shirt that says 'I survived New York media in 2012 and all I got was this lousy T-shirt.'' Dunham added. 'All I got was this lousy PTSD.' She continued: 'I felt like all the maturing and changing that had been kept at bay by the experience of being in that cocoon of the show was suddenly happening at a speed that was overwhelming. It was a painful metamorphosis,' she says. 'I definitely took an intentional break [from public life].' Since 2017, a year which marked the end of 'Girls'' six-season run, Dunham has not returned to acting on television. This is set to change with 'Too Much' this July. In Dunham's series, the showrunner will also portray the older sister of her lead character, played by Megan Stalter. Though she initially declined to appear on the show she felt compelled to take an on-screen role since the show closely follows her own experience moving across the pond. 'There was so much 'banter' and subtext I didn't get,' she said. 'Things were just slightly off.' Though there are similarities in the show, it's not biographical. Dunham said the characters 'may have started as reflections of who we [her and her husband] are' but insists 'they aren't us.' All episodes of 'Too Much' release on Netflix July 10. The post Lena Dunham 'Intentionally' Stepped Back From Acting, Public Life After 'Girls': 'All I Got Was This Lousy PTSD' appeared first on TheWrap.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store