Alfred Brendel
Alfred Brendel was perhaps the preeminent thinking pianist, a loner to whom fame came through the power of imaginative integrity, an artist who achieved -- at his best -- a profound rapport with and a unique understanding of piano literature from Bach to Schoenberg. Yet by his own account, "I did not come from a musical or intellectual family.... I have not been a child prodigy. I do not have a photographic memory; neither do I play faster than other people. I am not a good sight-reader." Brendel's recording catalog was vast, stretching back to the dawn of the LP era. He was also a compelling writer and remained active in that capacity after retirement and into the mid-2020s.Brendel was born to a family of Austrian background in Wiesenberg, Moravia, Czechoslovakia (in Czech, Wizemberg, and now Loučná nad Desnou in the Czech Republic) on January 5, 1931. He received piano lessons from ages six to 16 as the family moved from Zagreb to Graz and studied composition privately while supporting himself in a variety of odd jobs. Brendel was among the first generation to learn from recordings of pianists like Alfred Cortot, Wilhelm Kempff, and Artur Schnabel, with conductors Wilhelm Furtwängler and Arturo Toscanini proving especially valuable. Master classes with Eduard Steuermann -- a pupil of Busoni and Schoenberg -- and Edwin Fischer completed his sparse musical education. A 1948 debut recital in Graz marked the beginning of his career, which was propelled by a prize at the Busoni Competition in Bolzano in 1949. His first recording, with the Vienna State Opera Orchestra, appeared in 1950 or 1951 but wasn't the music for which he became better known; rather, it was Prokofiev's Piano Sonata No. 5 in G major, Op. 55.Busoni's example -- his mysticism and Faustian striving -- fascinated the young Brendel; the latter recorded Busoni's Fantasia Contrappuntistica in the early '50s. The ensnaring and gradual liberation from Busoni's influence may be traced in the several essays Brendel wrote about him in the collection Musical Thoughts & After-Thoughts. Armed with high musical ideals, Brendel embarked upon an international recital and recording career, which, in the '60s, saw his reputation grow throughout Europe and North America. He performed the entire cycle of Beethoven sonatas in London's Wigmore Hall in 1962 and recorded them for the budget Vox label, with the result that many classical listeners with more taste than money had their conceptions of repertory works deeply shaped by the pianist. In the '70s, he became an exclusive Philips artist, touring and recording a wide variety of composers, including Liszt, Mussorgsky, Stravinsky, Bartók, and Schoenberg, and garnering numerous awards. He remained perhaps best known, however, for his readings of the Viennese Classicists and early Romantics, from Haydn and Mozart to Schumann.He published books of musical criticism -- and comic poetry. In 2004, he appeared in concert with his son, cellist Adrian Brendel. Alfred Brendel announced his retirement in 2007 and undertook one last worldwide concert and recital tour, ending in Vienna in December 2008, performing, appropriately enough, Mozart's Jeunehomme Piano Concerto. Brendel remained active as a writer, and, at age 94, he contributed an essay about Busoni to a reissue of his early-'50s recordings of the Fantasia Contrappuntistica and of Liszt's Weihnachtsbaum (the latter was the world-recorded premiere of that work). Brendel was 94 when he died on June 17, 2025. No reliable count of Brendel's hundreds of recordings exists; the "complete discography" on his website is a sparse accounting of his digital releases. His recordings, even the earliest ones, remain avidly listened to, however, and his influence among thoughtful classical music listeners is perhaps unmatched.
© Adrian Corleonis & James Manheim /TiVo
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Discografía
361 álbum(es) • Ordenado por Mejores ventas
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Mussorgsky: Pictures At An Exhibition / Liszt: Piano Works
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 24 sept 1987
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Liszt: Sonata in B minor etc
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 1992
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo -
Schubert: Piano Sonatas Nos. 9, 18, 20, & 21
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 2001
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Mozart: The Piano Concertos, Vol.4
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 2005
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Mozart: The Piano Concertos, Vol.2
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 2005
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Brahms: Piano Concerto No.1
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 1980
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Mozart: The Piano Concertos, Vol.3
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 2005
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Alfred Brendel - Live
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 2007
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Beethoven: The Late Piano Sonatas
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 1993
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Schumann: Piano Concerto; Fantasy Op.17
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 1998
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Mozart Live 1978 (Live)
Clásica - Editado por Universal Music Australia Pty. Ltd. el 1 ene 1978
5 de DiapasonDisponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo -
Alfred Brendel, the Legendary Mozart & Beethoven Recordings, Vol. 3
Clásica - Editado por Brilliant Classics el 1 may 2013
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 17, 22 & 25
Música concertante - Editado por Vox el 11 oct 2024
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Mozart: The Piano Concertos, Vol.1
Clásica - Editado por Decca Music Group Ltd. el 1 ene 1990
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Brendel Plays Liszt, Vol. 2
Clásica - Editado por Vox Box el 1 ene 2001
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Brendel Plays Liszt, Vol. 2
Clásica - Editado por Vox Box el 1 ene 2001
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Liszt: Années de pèlerinage II, La lugubre gondola & Csárdás macabre
Clásica - Editado por Vox el 26 ene 2024
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 19 and 20 & Works for 2 Pianos
Clásica - Editado por Vox Box el 1 ene 2001
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Mozart: Piano Concertos Nos. 19 and 20 & Works for 2 Pianos
Clásica - Editado por Vox Box el 1 ene 2001
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo -
Dvořák: Slavonic Dances, Opp. 46 & 72 (Version for Piano 4 Hands)
Clásica - Editado por Vox el 1 ene 1959
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Haydn & Mozart: Piano Concertos
Música concertante - Editado por Vox el 1 ene 2001
Disponible en16-Bit/44.1 kHz Estéreo