Karl Czerny, the Viennese composer and pedagogue, is remembered today mainly for his pedagogical work. Every piano student has had to deal with his etudes and exercises on speed and fingering. Not for nothing is he considered one of the fathers of modern piano technique. As a teacher, he taught Liszt. As a student, he was a pupil of Hummel, Salieri, and Beethoven. He was a child prodigy, as befits every great pianist.
"I, undersigned, have the pleasure of attesting that young Karl Czerny has made an extraordinary advance on the piano, beyond what could be expected at the age of 14. I think he deserves all the help he can get, not only because of what I have just stated but because of his amazing memory."
A vast oeuvreKarl Czerny (1791 - 1857)
Indeed, Czerny was one of the great pianists of the first half of the 19th century. In 1812 he premiered his master's Emperor Concerto in Vienna.
But he did not like to play in public. He did not tour much either, preferring to stay in Vienna and compose, in which he was prolific: his oeuvre totals more than a thousand published opus numbers, including masses, symphonies, concertos, and sonatas. He never married, and at his death he left an important fortune.
Variations on a theme by Rode
The 20th century, however, had forgotten him as a composer. Until 1940, when Vladimir Horowitz discovered some interesting variations, stemming from his writing. They are variations on "La Ricordanza", an aria by Pierre Rode, a French violinist and composer.
After Horowitz's discovery, the master and great pedagogue Karl Czerny has enjoyed a modest rebirth, rescuing part of his work in the last twenty years; the compositional work we say, because his pedagogical contribution has been continuously present for two centuries.
The performance is by the South Korean pianist Sangyoung Kim.
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