great playing but i don't like the arrangiament... even some of their interpretation's and tempo choices. Triumphal march cannnot be played sweetly as it's a schumman piece.
Great - I played that duet in College (1972) with a guy named 'Roger"... if Roger sees this, tell me hi, guy! I can't remember your last name or how to find you. Just curious...
all the benefit of this music it is not a jazz, it is wrong to play it as it were a jazz. it loses much of pretty. and why hitting piano like that? you are classical pianists, not restaurant ballroom pianist, why playing with such a hate to piano sound
Thank you for that performance. Its been five years since the love of my life passed but this music gives me hope. I recently learned this work on piano and violin and others and i can play it by memory or hear.
Beautiful, controlled but melodic playing. So there was a 100 year memorial for Max Reger in Seoul, a composer who is half forgotten even in his native Germany. I sometimes wonder why East Asians love and excel in classical western music so much, even though it comes from an entirely different cultural tradition. There is no equivalent in other world regions (say, Southern Asia, the Middle East or Africa). Does anyone has a good explanation? I once read that practicing western classical music ties in well with an ideal of self-improvement that is engrained in Confucianism and Buddhism - does this make sense?