by Mark Ainley /
Feature / Recordings /
No Comments /
December 31, 2019
It is a sad reality that a great many supremely gifted musicians did not have careers that their talent might have warranted, with some of these great musicians having had to face some tremendous adversity.
Favourite Releases of 2019
No Comments /
December 31, 2019
/
I’ve stated previously that I believe we are living in the best time for the availability of historical recordings and 2019 was a banner year that proved that point. We saw increasing numbers of stellar
Jascha Spivakovsky: A Romantic Rediscovered
2 Comments /
November 1, 2019
/
Our appreciation of pianists of the past is based primarily on their recordings. How amazing that in this age of digital technology we can listen to the actual playing of pianists born and trained in
The Resplendent Rosita Renard
4 Comments /
September 30, 2019
/
It is a tremendous blessing that recording technology has allowed the playing of great musicians of the past to be preserved for future generations. In some cases, we are able to hear performances that came
Alfred Cortot and the Chopin Etudes
2 Comments /
September 26, 2019
/
Alfred Cortot was a supreme interpreter of Chopin – he studied with the composer’s pupil Émile Descombes – and fortunately he left us many recordings made over the course of several decades. At times his
Marcelle Meyer’s Last Records: World Premiere Vinyl Release
3 Comments /
September 5, 2019
/
Anyone who explores historical recordings is interested in ‘what might have been’ – opportunities for recordings that never transpired, missed chances that were not realized. Fortunately in some cases, new technology and the hard work
Putting It Together: 78rpm Disc Editing
No Comments /
September 3, 2019
/
I’ve recently been uploading some fantastic transfers of 78rpm discs made by Tom Jardine, who has generously allowed me to put them on my YouTube channel. In a couple of cases, joining one side of
The Piano Files 10th Anniversary
2 Comments /
July 8, 2019
/
When I began my Facebook page The Piano Files with Mark Ainley ten years ago, I had no idea that it would grow to the extent that it has – that wasn’t the intention. It
Harold Bauer
2 Comments /
July 1, 2019
/
“My earliest reaction to music, as far as I can recall, was one of fascinated terror.” It seems amazing that a pianist who produced one of the loveliest sonorities ever captured on record would have
The Dance of the Jester
5 Comments /
April 17, 2019
/
The YouTube link at the bottom of this page presents a remarkably clear transfer from a British pressing of a Columbia 78rpm disc featuring Dinu Lipatti’s legendary April 17, 1948 recording of Ravel’s Alborada del Gracioso.