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Was the Emerson the Emerson to the end? “We were afraid of going on too long,” Setzer said recently, and Sunday suggested that he, Drucker and Dutton have stopped at the timeliest of moments, without cause for regret. Nobody could pretend that Sunday saw the Emerson reclaim the heights from which it conquered chamber music, though it was hardly far-off. If its most celebrated predecessors, the Juilliard after World War II and the Guarneri later on, were responsible for a boom in American quartet playing, then it was the Emerson’s part to demonstrate how accomplished a quartet could become. It did not take the Emerson long to set the formidable technical standards that we take for granted among chamber musicians today.
Persons: Emerson, ” Setzer, Drucker, Dutton, Watkins, Schubert, , Guarneri, Setzer, George Szell’s, Bernard Holland, Bartok, Organizations: Juilliard, New York Times, George Szell’s Cleveland Orchestra, Deutsche Grammophon
Pianist Keith Jarrett, a pioneer in several musical realms whose efforts were met with near-universal acclaim, can no longer perform. His multifaceted career included jazz ventures with the likes of Art Blakey , Charles Lloyd and Miles Davis ; classical endeavors in works by J.S. Bach , Bartók, Pärt and American-Armenian composer Alan Hovhaness ; and, most famously, expansive solo improvisations, such as the iconic “Köln Concert” of 1975, one of the best-selling piano recordings in history. Now, sidelined by two devastating strokes, both suffered in 2018, that part of his life has come to an end. Yet, numerous recordings are still in the can, and ECM is beginning to roll out a series of new issues—including a splendid solo concert captured live in Bordeaux, France, in 2016, to be released on Sept. 30.
‘Chess Story’ Review: Playing the Nazis’ Game
  + stars: | 1938-03-11 | by ( Kyle Smith | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
All of the swells of Vienna are gathered for an intoxicating evening of fancy dress, fizzy wine and graceful waltzing. “As long as Vienna keeps dancing, the world can’t end,” reasons high-living notary Josef Bartok in “Chess Story.” Vienna stops dancing: It’s March 11, 1938. Later that night the Austrian premier will resign, turning the country over to the Third Reich as Bartok ( Oliver Masucci ) returns home. Adapted from the novella by Stefan Zweig , “Chess Story” is a diabolically knotted psychological thriller. The board game emerges as a fascist tool for crushing the psyche of one’s opponent, a portal to liberation, or possibly both.
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