Palm trees can't grow in Siberia, but Beethoven cannot die
01/19/2001
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I got a free ticket to a concert at the Oakland Paramount theatre in California, years ago. They introduced a pianist who had been exiled to Siberia (If I remember correctly) and hadn't seen a piano in over twenty years... I don't know what I was expecting. Perhaps a gnarled, weather-beaten, brow-beaten, long-suffering musician, who would totter on stage and give a feeble, but praiseworthy performance. But instead, this small roundish woman lithely strode unto the stage. She gave the most powerful, passionate, thunderous rendering of Brahms and Beethoven I have ever heard or since. Whenever I think of true musicianship and its connection to the depth of the human spirit, I remember her dazzling music that night, with humility and awe."
There is heart and sole in this
Happy customer of Amazon.com | USA | 10/04/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is the second purchase of this artist and I plan to include more for my Christmas list. The music is magnificent. There is heart and soul in it. There is inspiration in it. You want to listen over and over again, and we do. We searched for more work from this pianist and could not find any. It is not possible that she has only this recording.
Happy Customer of Amazon.com
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