In the winter of 1928 a sallow, jittery, 23-year-old Russian pianist named Vladimir Horowitz made a sensational Manhattan debut at a Carnegie Hall concert under the baton of gouty Sir Thomas Beecham.
The Stecher and Horowitz Foundation in collaboration with The Music Teachers National Association (MTNA) have announced the ...
Byron Janis, the celebrated classical pianist who studied with Vladimir Horowitz, recorded previously unknown Chopin waltzes from manuscripts he unearthed and became a cultural hero in the U.S ...
However, for Ivan, Vladimir Horowitz was the most completely satisfying pianist, whose playing had a “wild, almost fury.” Ivan described Horowitz as having small hands that were not like the ...
Pianist Vladimir Horowitz earned 25 Grammys, with notable wins such as Best Classical Performance, Instrumental Soloist or Soloists (with or without orchestra) for "Horowitz in Concert" and Best ...
Barenboim plays with an unpredictability akin to the more recent Arrau, and he is almost the only younger pianist about whom Arrau has something nice to say in Horowitz's book. Comparisons of Arrau ...