Showing posts with label jambor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jambor. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2011

Agi Jambor performs Bach


Followers of this modest blog probably figured out long ago that I love Bach's keyboard works played on piano. There is just something completely satisfying and mesmorizing when listening to one masterpiece after another brought to life on a concert grand piano. My latest installment features Toccatas and Fantasias as realized by the Hungarian-American pianist/teacher Agi Jambor.

Jambor was a fascinating woman, an excellent pianist and a true citizen of the world. From a 1993 Baltimore Sun profile, Stephen Wigler writes:

" She achieved fame as a pianist twice, and was forgotten each time; she used to play duets in Berlin with an amateur violinist named Albert Einstein; she arrived penniless in America after World War II, unable to speak English and without a piano, and resumed her career by practicing on a battered upright at a YWCA in Washington; she married and divorced a Hollywood star; and she was a hero of the anti-Nazi resistance in her native Budapest, where she narrowly escaped death several times by passing herself off as a prostitute named Maryushka."

Incredible stuff I would say. If Jambor did not play Bach with such conviction, she would surely have won an Emmy for a reality television series! Her mastery of the material is without a doubt absolute and it is quite obvious that the fingerprints of her esteemed teacher Edwin Fischer are liberally spread throughout this program. This is strong, reverential Bach played with a masculine touch by a remarkably feminine but strong willed woman. That is fascinating in itself. I am pleased to have come across this unique 2 lp set for it adds to another dimension of my listening from this greatest of masters.

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