During an interview with Sandra Okamoto in Columbus, GA today, Sandra asked how we can further young audiences at the symphony orchestra concerts. I shared that when I was in Knoxville recently, they had a blogger’s reception following the performance. They are friends, colleagues and love to share their ideas. Wouldn’t it interesting if orchestras can create a Young People’s Blogger Society at their Symphony? This can be incorporated into the school music programs, where students can learn about the composers, the music and soloists in the concerts they will attend. The symphony orchestra might have a special Young People’s Blog reception following a performance, and the children would have the opportunities to meet with their fellow bloggers and make new friends. What better way than this to build future audiences by using the technology of today, used by children every day in their learning and socializing.

Comments No Comments »

After performing for over twenty years, I am looking forward to traversing the US to orchestras in a variety of repertoire. I always feared that new music would lose a place in society due to inaccessibility amongst the wary audience. Fortunately, there are composers aplenty who have revived the lush neo-Romantic style coupled with a breath of fresh air in harmonic, melodic and rhythmic textures.

In addition to recording Ellen Taaffe Zwilich works for piano and orchestra in 2009, this season will bring out a remarkable piano concerto by Keith Emerson, who was the electrifying keyboardist of Emerson, Lake and Palmer, plus many performances of Lowell Liebermann’s Third Piano Concerto. The Liebermann project began in 2003, and it is only now that I will be able to sit at the piano and enjoy the performances with the co-commissioning orchestras.

At long last, Leroy Anderson’s 2008 centennial is upon us. Since 1992, I have embraced his delightful piano ‘Concerto in C’, and the Naxos recording I did with Leonard Slatkin and the BBC Concert Orchestra will be jubilantly released in January 2008. On a personal note, I cannot begin to express the utmost pleasure and distinct honor to have worked with Maestro Slatkin. We met over twenty years ago–all I can remember was that I played the ‘Islamey Fantasy’ for him in a room at Lincoln Center’s Avery Fisher Hall. I had only dreamed of working with him, and the reality of that dream was well worth the long wait. Earlier this season, after another long wait, I had the pleasure to work with Andrew Litton and the Colorado Symphony with Liebermann’s Third Concerto. As a pianist as well, Maestro Litton grasped the score and understood every nuance and every move I made, which made for a wonderful first collaboration–and, he is one heckuva guy and musician!

Naturally, a fear is always to become stereo-typed, and fortunately, I have made sure not to allow myself to lose my love for the standard repertoire. I will include the Rachmaninoff Third Concerto and Prokofieff Third Concerto this season, along with Beethoven’s ‘Emperor’ Concerto.

I look forward to meeting new people throughout the US, and will be better at posting new blogs during the season.

Comments No Comments »

I am in Gadsden, AL this weekend to premiere Daniel Dorff’s delightful Piano Concerto with the ever-resourceful Maestro Mike Gagliardo and his Etowah Youth Symphony. Some know Daniel as a composer of wonderful music, or as Head of Publications at Theodore Presser Inc.The youngsters play their hearts out, and last night, we were treated to a special concert featuring an Electric Strings ensemble made up of members of the Etowah Youth Symphony. These beautiful instruments are made by the amazing Mark Wood, a founding member and artist with the Trans-Siberian Orchestra. I was amazed! The sounds Mark is able to get from his electric violin was astounding–much more than saying it is like an electric guitar with a bow–it’s very special. Youth orchestras should seek him out for a special guest visit. The kids were terrific and he enjoyed working with them immensely.

Comments No Comments »

A wonderful pianist and friend, Matthew Cameron (who himself transcribed Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik for solo piano, published by International and up at You Tube as well as Liszt’s Les Preludes) encouraged me to get my music on You Tube. Before the videos of Rachmaninoff’s Second and Prokofieff’s Third Concerti will be up this spring, Matthew created a wonderfuil montage of Chopin photos to accompany a live, unedited performance of Chopin’s Double Thirds Etude. I share it with pleasure:

YouTube – Jeffrey Biegel performs Chopin Etude Op. 25 No. 6

Comments No Comments »

I hope this will be of interest to piano teachers and students. The new Schirmer Student Piano Library has made my edition of Schumann´s Scenes from Childhood available at the Hal Leonard website www.halleonard.com The new edition is true to the original Schumann text, and provides a foreword, historical overview, performance comments and a cd which I recorded for the edition. I hope it will be enjoyed for many generations to come!

SCHUMANN – SCENES FROM CHILDHOOD (KINDERSCENEN) OPUS 15
Schirmer Performance Editions SeriesSeries: Educational Piano Library Publisher: G. Schirmer, Inc.
Medium: Softcover with CD
Editor: Jeffrey Biegel Composer: Robert Schumann

Perfect literature for the intermediate to early advanced pianist, these miniatures by Schumann have been favorites of many generations of students. The pieces are an excellent introduction to Schumann’s piano music and to Romantic musical literature in general. Includes the famous “Träumerei.”

Contents: Of Strange Lands and People (Von fremden Ländern und Menschen) “Curious Story (Kuriose Geschichte) “Blindman’s Bluff (Hasche-Mann) “Pleading Child (Bittendes Kind) “Perfect Happiness (Glückes genug) “Great Adventure (Wichtige Begebenheit) “Reverie (Träumerei) “By the Fireside (Am Kamin) “On the Rocking Horse (Ritter vom Steckenpferd) “Almost Too Serious (Fast zu ernst) “Hobgoblin (Fürchtenmachen) “A Child Falling Asleep (Kind in Einschlummern) “The Poet Speaks (Der Dichter spricht)

View Songlist$9.95 (US) Inventory # HL 00296641ISBN: 1423405439UPC: 73999753141Width: 9Length: 1232 pages

Comments No Comments »

I received a phone call today that the piano for the third performance of Lowell Liebermann’s Third Piano Concerto was not quite on the level they thought I would expect. The middle pedal was not working either–well, I only use that one once in the concerto, so it is ok. They also expect only 60 people to attend–that means more people on stage than in the Stadtheater in Heide, Germany. Did I want to cancel out and the orchestra play something else? I said I was paid already to play all five concerts–but the option was mine.

My choice: bum out and hang out doing nothing, or face the challenge and meet my ‘blind date’ piano. Not just because I am paid to do so, I think it is exciting to see just what the piano is all about. I said, ‘I will go and play–you know me well enough that I can say with all humility–I can try to make any piano sound good! That’s what my teacher taught us. That’s my job.” Not to mention the fact that if I bummed out, that’s what they would remember more than the other four performances–and that lessens your chances to get re-engaged! Maestro Gerard Oskamp is one of the kindest and finest conductors I have met–he has brought me to Flensburg to his Schleswig-Holstein Symphony Orchestra three times in less than four years–that’s quite hospitable! We’ve done Saint-Saens 2 and Liszt 1 in the first visit (yes, both in each concert!!!!), then Grieg in the second visit, and then he agreed to bring the orchestra into the Liebermann global project as one of the 18 co-commissioning orchestras. It’s the official European premiere. Too bad this is his last season–I only hope the orchestra and new music director will remember me. No–I wasn’t about to stay at the hotel and forego the concert.

After getting lost a few times, I spotted the Stadtheater sign and the taxi driver let me out. I went into the hall, a tender and charming hall, and found the Steinway “C”. Well, never agree with anyone until you see for yourself. OK–the middle pedal doesn’t work and the sound is occasionally thin, but I know exactly what to do. After a short meeting with the piano, I found the soft spots and made it sing. It’s a finer piano than I had anticipated. And–I walked around the entire little town in the brisk cold–it is absolutely charming–I loved it. I am now sitting in the Heide Hof restaurant–the young chef had a nice but not overbearing buffet–excellent food! And now I get to play the concert shortly. See what I would have missed if I said ‘no?’

Comments No Comments »

In 1997, pianist Jeffrey Biegel pioneered the first live audio/video internet piano recitals in New York and Amsterdam. The recording engineer cleverly reorded a DAT master simultaneously which resulted in a commercially released cd titled, cyberecital.com. In the age of digital download distribution, this historic recording is now available at: http://www.rhapsody.com/jeffreybiegel/cyberecitalcom

For more information about Jeffrey Biegel, please visit him at www.cyberecital.com. News featuring new editions of Schumann’s Scenes from Childhood and The Sonatina Album in music book form with audio cd for the Schirmer Student Piano Library Performance Editions, distributed through the Hal Leonard Corporation, will be announced in February.

Comments No Comments »

The ever brilliant and resourceful maestro Leonard Slatkin introduced a rare find to me: pianist Emile Naoumoff’s transcription for piano and orchestra of Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an Exhibition”. Naoumoff provides a wonderful case for this work which sounds fine for solo piano, or solo orchestra–however, he felt, as do I, that the piece screams for collaboration for the piano and the orchestra. Maestro Slatkin suggested I explore this piece, and I am glad I did. I have the cd of Naoumoff performing the work and Boosey and Hawkes houses the score and parts. The Naoumoff cadenzas are quite fine, and give ample opportunity for the pianist to expand some of the motivic material. The dialogue between piano and orchestra is well done. It allows both parties to have their share of the piece comfortably. Personally, I would like very much to include this in my repertoire, and will do my best to share this with conductor friends.

Comments No Comments »

In teaching Ravel’s ‘Le Tombeau de Couperin’, I am curious if teachers reading this post instruct their students to search online for information about the dedicatees of each movement of the suite. I was playing ‘Forlane’ for one student and realized halfway through that it reminded me of a boat chant, perhaps–and in searching for the translation of ‘tombeau’, I was directed during my student’s lesson to a site describing the piece. We looked up Gabriel Deluc, the dedicatee of the ‘Forlane’, as I was not familiar with his name. Deluc was a famous painter–one painting he titled, ‘Le lac’– who was trained as a nurse and died in World War I, as did all the dedicatees of each movement. His paintings were hanging in Ravel’s home which he owned after the war. I instructed my student to search each name online for each movement’s dedicatee and see what he learns–I think it will have a deeper effect on him and draw him closer to the work and the composer. He could certainly do a wonderful lecture recital on this–although, perhaps it’s been done many times and I am finding this for the first time.

Comments No Comments »

What an unusual experience: returning to pieces I have not played for so long–in an attempt to try to repeat the way I played twenty years ago, I am somewhat relieved that I am not playing as I did twenty years ago. What does that mean? In my young search for the ultimate interpretations of standard repertoire, I remember so much of the process–tonal production, tempi, pedaling, phrasing, dynamics. In returning to these pieces, it almost seems too easy–everything falls into place without the same thought and stress of ‘what to do’. I find I am playing fast pieces a bit slower, and slow pieces a bit faster. What’s that all about? Perhaps it has something to do with age and experience–teaching, performing, arranging, who knows. I don’t find the need to play as fast–although it probably still is fast as necessary–and I was never ridiculed or criticized for doing so, or for trying too hard to make a musical statement. I find more simplicity now–clearer thoughts, musical lines–not to say I am finding things more matter-of-fact, quite the contrary–I simply find it easier to do what’s on the page and alittle more, without it sounding drippingly over-Romantic or underestimating the emotional state of the composer at the time of writing. I am finding a marriage of heart, mind and spirit which is not as ‘mindful’ and cerebral as it might have been, rather, more of a natural language than it has ever been. Then comes the question: am I doing enough? Well, I am still able to sing out loud as I play and float the melodies on a single breath without feeling the need to grasp for air (I have always sang along as I practiced, as did my teacher, Adele Marcus). I am not sure if my fingers can fly as fast as they did–though in encores after concerti, they do, but musically, I can’t do that–it doesn’t seem appropriate to play too fast when the music doesn’t speak naturally–

There is a renewed sense of inner trust–to do what comes naturally–trusting the years of effort placed on thought and reason. I trust I will do exactly what is appropriate. I have grown to like that word ‘appropriate’–it is not a definite interpretation when one says it is ‘appropriate’, because it is appropriate for the now–not right, and not wrong. What was appropriate twenty years ago is not now. I can play a slow movement to a Mozart Sonata and a Brahms Intermezzo appropriately now–not overdone, not underdone (yes, like a steak!) I am not as worried that it is too slow, or too fast–it is the singing line that predominates my sense of pulse now. I don’t use a metronome–my sense of pulse is based on the natural vocal lines, and Andante for Mozart is not so slow, nor is Adagio for Brahms. The word isn’t metronomically as important to me as it is a sense of the phrase and the rhythmic flow.

The acid test will come when I perform recitals in Norway in January. This new sense is not as apparent in the concerto playing, because we have to keep a beat with the conductor and have the orchestra playing along. In recital, however, is where we are alone and the interpretation has ebbs and tides. I am curious to hear the reactions–especially from people who have not heard me perform these works for nearly 20 years.

Comments No Comments »

  • Buy Cheapest schizophrenia medication costs Online Cheap Pharmacy Online. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap treatment for menopause insomnia Now Discount Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheap aciphex wiki Online Free Viagra Pills! Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheap medication respiratory infection Now Free Viagra Pills! Top Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap best medicine swollen throat Online Guaranteed Shipping. Cheap Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheapest wellbutrin effexor alcohol Online Buy Medications Online. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheapest tricor crestor Online Best Online. Internet Prices For tricor crestor!
  • Buy Cheapest acne medications cream Now Top Online Pharmacy. Guaranteed Shipping.
  • Buy Cheapest dostinex by mail order Now Pharmacy Store. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheap famous pharmacies Online Best Prices. The Largest Internet Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest para med health care Now Order Cheap Meds Without Rx. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap eurax without a prescription Now Low Prices. No Prescription Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap medicine aleve Online Best Drugstore. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheapest buy best generic pyridium tablets without a prescription Now Free Viagra Pills! Cheap Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheap gout medicine list Online 24/Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheapest my mexican pharmacy Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheapest escitalopram side effects Online Best Internet. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheap levothroid price Now Free Viagra Pills! Online Prices For levothroid price!
  • Buy Cheapest order doxazosin Now Top Online Pharmacy. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap candida medication Now Low Prices. Internet Prices For candida medication!
  • Buy Cheap dose for ventolin inhaler Online Special Prices For dose for ventolin inhaler! Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap online pet medications Now 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheap zyban medication side effects Online Best Prices. The Largest Internet Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap canadian pharmacy adipex without a prescription Online Cheap Pharmacy Online. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheapest libido female enhancement Now No Prescription Needed. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap ramipril medicine Online Best Online. 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap canadian rx drugs Online Pharmacy Store. Drugs, Health And Beauty.
  • Buy Cheapest pariet online pharmacy without a prescription Online WorldWide Shipping. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheap augmentin emedicine Online Pharmacy At The Best Price! Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest use proactiv acne medication Online No Prescription Needed. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheapest celebrex medication for arthritis Online Guaranteed Shipping. WorldWide Shipping.
  • how to get antibiotics for chlamydia Online Without Prescription Best Online. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap when to take suhagra Online Cheap Prescription Drugs. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheapest buy tinidazole overnight delivery Online Low Prices. Order Cheap Meds Without Rx.
  • Buy Cheapest eczema medicines Now Discount Online Pharmacy. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap how many cvs pharmacies are there Now Guaranteed Shipping. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheapest men health shaving products Now Prescription Drugs And Generic Medications.
  • Buy Cheapest simvastatin medication Now Cheap Online Pharmacy. Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheap order lopressor Now Guaranteed Shipping. Cheap Prescription Drugs.
  • Buy Cheap identify prescription medicine Online Top Online Pharmacy Supplier. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheap yeast infection fluconazole dosage Now FDA Approved Rx: Online Pharmacy. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap chlamydia medicine side effects Now 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest quetiapine Online Drugs, Health And Beauty. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheapest medication micardis Online Best Internet. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheapest medication simvastatin Online Best Prices. Pharmacy At The Best Price!
  • Buy Cheap proventil inhaler generic Now Best Drugstore. Special Prices For proventil inhaler generic!
  • Buy Cheapest acne medication prescription Online Cheap Pharmacy Online. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheap purchase mevacor Online Cheap Prescription Drugs. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest clarinex medication Online Online Prices For clarinex medication! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest sinemet Now We Can Offer You Visit Our Online Pharmacy.
  • order wellbutrin sr no prescription Online Without Prescription Best Prices. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheapest women breast enlargement pills Online WorldWide Shipping. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy altace medicine Online Without Prescription. Best Online. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap us licensed online pharmacy Now Order Cheap Meds Without Rx. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap quetiapine mg Now No Prescription Needed. Cheap Pharmacy Online.
  • Buy Cheapest prednisolone side effects children Online Best Prices. Discount Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap herbal menopause releif Online Guaranteed Shipping. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap pet medication online Online 24/Internet)(safe Pharmacy. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap wellbutrin sr buy no prescription Online Prescription Drugs And Generic Medications.
  • Buy Cheapest medications for hypothyroidism weight loss Now Free Viagra Pills! No Prescription Needed.
  • turmeric benefits Online Without Prescription Best Prices. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheap buy lioresal no prescription Online Low Prices. Safe And Secure Payment System.
  • Buy Cheapest buy antifungals online pharmacy Now Cheap Pharmacy Online. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheapest what is the medicine fluconazole used for Now WorldWide Shipping. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheap order doxazosin Now 24/Online Pharmacy. No Prescription Needed.
  • Buy Cheap online pet meds Now Cheap Online Pharmacy. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest psoriasis medications Now Online Medical Shop. Cheap Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap how to buy medication online safely Online WorldWide Shipping. Cheap Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest syphilis medicine Now Best Drugstore. Buy Medications Online.
  • Buy Cheapest buy asthma inhalers without a prescription Online Drugs, Health And Beauty. Best Online.
  • Buy Cheapest prescription medications for psoriasis Online Online Medical Shop. WorldWide Shipping.
  • Buy Cheap floxin online pharmacy canada discount prices Now Online Prices For floxin online pharmacy canada discount prices! Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap adhd non-prescription medicines Online Discount Pharmacy Online. Best Drugstore.
  • Buy Cheap buy dostinex without prescription Now Order Cheap Meds Without Rx. Pharmacy Store.
  • anti epilepsy medication Online Without Prescription Pharmacy Store. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap buy triamterene without prescription Online Buy Medications Online. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap free online pet medical advice Now Cheap Prescription Drugs. Best Internet.
  • assistance with prescription medications Online Without Prescription Best Online. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheapest proventil inhaler use Now Best Prices. Drugs, Health And Beauty.
  • Buy Cheapest sinequan generic Online WorldWide Shipping. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheap female sexual enhancement drug Online Online Medical Shop. Cheap Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest ventolin inhaler for sale Now Pharmacy Store. Top Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheap diamox medication Now Online Medical Shop. Top Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest lopressor medicine Online Low Prices. Order Cheap Meds Without Rx.
  • Buy Cheap vitamins for good bone health Now Pharmacy At The Best Price! Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheapest cozaar 25mg Now Special Prices For cozaar 25mg! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap medication naproxen Now Cheap Meds Without Prescription. Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheap bph medication Online Best Drugstore. Special Prices For bph medication!
  • Buy Cheap meloxicam medicine Now Top Online Pharmacy. 24/Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest how to buy medication online safely Online Pharmacy Store. Cheap Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest order pet medications without prescriptions Now Low Prices. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.
  • Buy Cheap buy suhagra cod Now 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed. Best Internet.
  • Buy Cheapest valsartan vs losartan Now Discount Pharmacy Online. Low Prices.
  • Buy Cheap adhd online medicine prescription Online Cheap Online Pharmacy. Online Medical Shop.
  • Buy Cheap loratadine side effects Online We Can Offer You Visit Our Online Pharmacy.
  • Buy Cheapest acne medication prescription Now Discount Online Pharmacy. Pharmacy Store.
  • Buy Cheap wellbutrin sr no prescription Online Low Prices. Discount Pharmacy Online.
  • nsaid medication Online Without Prescription Free Viagra Pills! Best Prices.
  • Buy Cheapest lotrisone cream Online Best Drugstore. Free Viagra Pills!
  • Buy Cheap medicine for gonorrhea treatment Now Discount Pharmacy Online. Guaranteed Shipping.