[pianotech] Half o t

PianoCare2 pianocare2 at bigpond.com
Thu Jun 4 22:31:14 MDT 2009


I have to reply to my own post.
I just finished listening to Nobuyuki's concerto performance.... well the
last 10 minutes as I got in from work.... at it was amazing... Chopin No 1.
Standing ovation from the audience and goose bumps for me...
Bravo!!

Brian

-----Original Message-----
From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On Behalf
Of PianoCare2
Sent: Thursday, 4 June 2009 7:40 PM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: Re: [pianotech] Half o t

William

Thanks for these comments. I have been watching the competition through
www.cliburn.tv <http://www.cliburn.tv/>  . It is great to watch live
performances, as well as prior rounds and also rehearsals for the
finals. Nobuyuki is inspirational. I must add that Di Wu's rehearsal of
Beethoven 2nd concerto was fantastic.. Especially the singing tone in
the second movement.  Bozhanov is also up there. It is going to be a
great final. Hopefully Nobuyuki will finish in the top three.

Brian Wilson

________________________________

From: pianotech-bounces at ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces at ptg.org] On
Behalf Of Piano Boutique
Sent: Monday, 1 June 2009 9:41 AM
To: pianotech at ptg.org
Subject: [pianotech] Half o t

 

List, I ran across this on one of my blind lists and thought you might
find it interesting.

 

William

 

 

Blind pianists wows audiences at piano contest
By ANGELA K. BROWN - 20 hours ago

 

FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - With a dramatic bow of pianist Nobuyuki
Tsujii's
head, rich sounds of the piano, violins, cello and viola broke the
concert
hall silence as he and a string quartet played Schumann's Piano Quintet
in
E-flat major, Op. 44.

 

Just before the final note about 30 minutes later, the Van Cliburn
International Piano Competition audience began clapping. People jumped
to
their feet, some whistling or yelling, "Bravo!"

 

The standing ovation lasted nearly five minutes, so long that the
20-year-old from Japan returned to the stage twice to bow, grinning from
ear
to ear.

 

The audience may have loved Friday's performance, but not everyone may
have
known its significance. Tsujii - who was born blind - had to figure out
how
to cue the other musicians. That was especially important with the
Schumann
piece, because all instruments must start playing simultaneously in the
first movement.

 

After his first rehearsal last week with the Takacs Quartet - the
University
of Colorado at Boulder-based group that performs with all 12 Cliburn
semifinalists - Tsujii said he decided to nod his head as a cue.

 

He had only played with a chamber music group once before, recently in
Japan, after learning it would be required should he advance to the
Cliburn
semifinals. He previously performed with symphony orchestras in Paris,
Berlin and Tokyo, and he followed the conductor's breathing, he said.

 

But Tsujii said his blindness has not limited his playing opportunities
and
that he doesn't want to be known as the pianist who cannot see.

 

"The most important objective as I'm performing is that the audience is
going to be moved," Tsujii said through an interpreter.

 

While playing on stage, first violin Edward Dusinberre occasionally
glanced
at Tsujii, and he and the other Takacs Quartet members also seemed to
rely
on musical cues.

 

"We've had a great time working with him," Dusinberre said before
Friday's
performance. "There is of course a tremendous intensity to his listening
to
what we're doing, and his sense of timing is very natural, and so we're
having a great time communicating with him."

 

Cliburn officials initially said Tsujii was the competition's first
blind
competitor but recently were reminded about a blind pianist who didn't
advance past the first round in 1973.

 

Tsujii, nicknamed Nobu, already had fans in Japan but has gained even
more
since arriving at the Cliburn. So far, video of his preliminary round
performance on the contest's Web site has about 11,400 views, the most
of
the 29 pianists who started in the competition.

 

Van Cliburn, the legendary classical pianist and namesake of the
prestigious
contest held every four years, told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that
Tsujii's playing was "absolutely miraculous" and "truly divine" after
hearing him last week.

 

Tsujii was just a baby when he showed an interest in music, said his
mother,
Itsuko Tsujii of Tokyo.

 

"When I would put on Chopin CDs, he reacted very actively, patting the
sofa,
and seemed to be enjoying it," she said through an interpreter.

 

After he played the toy piano she got him at age 2, he started taking
lessons at 4 and began learning to read music in Braille. But because
that
method took too much time, he listened to music recorded by his piano
teacher and memorized it, which took a few days for some pieces or a
week
for longer, more complex ones, he said.

 

"Although he is blind, you never know that when listening to his music,"
Rena Miyamoto, an assistant piano teacher at Ueno Gakuen University in
Tokyo
who recently began working with him, said through an interpreter. "His
music
is from his soul, his heart."

 

The six Cliburn finalists will be announced Sunday night. All of them
will
receive managed concert tours worth $1 million, and each of the top
three
finishers will receive $20,000 and get to record a CD, among other
prizes.
The winners will be announced June 7.

 

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ibozl-WK0Gob0c6-XJUQZ_
NBKVNQD98GRI681

 

Kathy blackburn

 

kblackbn at austin.rr.com

 

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