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Isidor Philipp

Isidor Edmond Philipp (first name sometimes spelled Isidore) (2 September 1863 – 20 February 1958) was a French pianist, composer, and pedagogue of Jewish Hungarian descent. He was born in Budapest and died in Paris.

Isidor Philipp
Isidor Philipp ca. 1910
Born(1863-09-02)2 September 1863
Died20 February 1958(1958-02-20) (aged 94)
NationalityFrench
Citizenship France
Occupation(s)Composer and Pedagogue

Biography edit

Isidor Philipp was a child prodigy at the piano in his Hungarian homeland. When he was old enough, friends and family raised money for him to study piano at the professional level at the Conservatoire de Paris, regarded as the finest music conservatory in Europe. There, he studied piano under Georges Mathias (a pupil of Frédéric Chopin and Friedrich Kalkbrenner) at the Conservatoire de Paris and upon graduation won First Prize in piano performance in 1883. Other teachers included Camille Saint-Saëns, Stephen Heller (a pupil of Carl Czerny, one of Beethoven's students) and Théodore Ritter (a pupil of Franz Liszt). At the Conservatoire, he met fellow student Claude Debussy. They remained lifelong friends, and Philipp not only played his piano works in public, but consulted with Debussy on how best to notate them so that pianists would understand Debussy's intentions. As a result, Philipp was regarded as the leading authority on Debussy's piano music after his death.

After graduating from the Conservatoire, Philipp commenced a career which took him to various European countries, and he was a regular performer at the Colonne, Lamoureux and Conservatoire concerts in Paris. He was able to hear concerts, recitals or master classes by many of the leading pianists of the day, including Liszt and Anton Rubinstein. He knew Charles-Valentin Alkan, a close friend of Chopin's, and was a pall-bearer at Alkan's funeral in 1888; he subsequently edited many of Alkan's works for republication.[1]

In 1890 Philipp formed a trio with violinist Loeb and cellist Bertelier which toured for about a decade. He revived the Société des Instruments à Vent from 1896 to 1901. However, he eventually curtailed his concertizing, as he found lasting satisfaction in teaching. He returned to the Conservatoire de Paris, where he was a pre-eminent professor of piano from 1893 to 1934, one of the youngest ever appointed to that institution, serving as Chair of the piano department for much of that time. From 1921 to 1933, Philipp was also the head of the piano section at the American Conservatory of Fontainebleau, which became famous for starting the careers of many notable American composers.

His home in Paris contained many ancient and unusual instruments and other musical artifacts. When the Nazis entered Paris in World War II and Philipp fled to the United States in 1940, the Nazis confiscated the contents of his apartment and they were never recovered.

He left for the United States in 1941 and taught in New York and L'Alliance Francais in Louiseville, Quebec, Canada. During the war, he taught piano in New York City and at the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal. While he was in New York, he gave recitals with the violinist John Corigliano Sr. (Corigliano was the longtime concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic).[2] After the war, he spent the rest of his life between New York City and Paris.

Philipp married once but he obtained a divorce shortly afterwards.

On 20 March 1955, aged 91, he played the piano part in both Saint-Saëns' D minor Sonata and César Franck's Violin Sonata in New York, returning to Paris a year later. He gave his farewell recital at the age of 92, in Paris. He died there in 1958 after a fall on the Paris metro.[3] He is buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery.

In 1977, the Isidor Philipp Archives were deposited at the University of Louisville by the American Liszt Society. They gather his compositions for the piano, his exercises and studies, his editions of the works of Franz Liszt, as well as exercises, studies and works on other composers, recordings, correspondence, photographs, and other artifacts.

The Chopin tradition edit

Philipp began piano lessons with George Mathias at age 16. In an interview with E.H. Lampard, a columnist for the St. Catharine's Standard, Harold Bradley, who was a student and associate of Philipp's for over 30 years, stated that it was Mathias who had been the one student of Chopin who absorbed all the wisdom and value in piano pedagogy that Chopin had developed over his life. "Chopin's fame as a composer has obscured the fact that he was the first and greatest name to adopt the career of piano teaching as a profession. He created an entirely new philosophy of musical thinking, and was the first musician of sufficient stature to be able to penetrate into the thought of the keyboard composers who preceded him to the extent of seeing the individual merits of each. Thus, he extended the dimensions of piano teaching to a point where the whole concept of music education became affected."[citation needed]

As most of Chopin's students were amateurs, or died early, Mathias was the only one who could pass on this legacy. Bradley continued, "This is not to be confused with the mere performance of Chopin's own compositions, but an appreciation of the art of the keyboard composers up to his time and the genius to apply this knowledge. At Chopin's death, it was Mathias who was able to furnish information for the complete publication of his compositions but he also felt an obligation to preserve the contribution Chopin had made as a teacher and artist. Mathias in turn trained young pianists, but it proved to be Isidor Philipp that was best equipped to carry on the Chopin philosophy of teaching. Philipp then worked with Mathias that the latter had worked with Chopin. By the age of 30, because of his studies Mathias and other prominent teachers, Philipp was recognized as the supreme authority on the piano and its literature."[citation needed]

Teaching philosophy edit

In interviews his students remember him with a great deal of affection and remark about his gentle and patient manner as a teacher. Students commented that he stressed suppleness, firmness, rhythmic exactitude and articulation. He insisted on practicing with the metronome, first slowly, then incrementally faster for all technical exercises and in learning any new piece. He taught that octaves should be played from the wrist, with a motionless arm, and that fingers should attain true independence of one another. Like other great teachers, he did not have a 'system', but taught what the student needed at the time. Paul Loyonnet stated his ideals were velocity, sobriety of expression and the jeu perle style. As for interpretations, he stressed that the student must know the piece intimately and thoroughly before it can be properly played, but did not force any particular interpretation.

Philipp's repertoire was wide, from the earliest keyboard masters to contemporary composers. He believed that every pianist should be conversant in all styles and eras of piano, and did not shy from playing Bach or other early composers on a modern grand. One of his teaching points was that pianists should play any piece of music the way the composer intended, and seeking out what the composer intended is often a lifelong process. Nonetheless, each pianist should have his own views on the pieces and not just copy what another has done.

Philipp wrote, "The quality most desirable in piano playing is tone. Tone should be worked at from the first, and the pupil must listen attentively to it. To produce a beautiful tone, Thalberg said, 'one should in a way knead the keyboard with a hand of velvet, the key being rather felt than struck.' It is essential to maintain the utmost relaxation in the arms, wrists and hands." Fernando Laires said that Philipp insisted that the music and the tone should arise from deep within the piano, not pounded out at the keyboard, and by that he meant that he must come deep within one's soul, not at the fingertips.

Rubato, Philipp wrote, does not mean playing out of time, but rather, "any ritenuto that we may be impelled to make, must be compensated by a corresponding accelerando and also the opposite, the bass keeping exactly the time." Although Philipp abhorred distortions in interpreting pieces, he believed that "even when all the interpretive signs are exactly observed, there remains ample scope for self expression and liberty. You must be living and feeling the drama or the poem or the piece you play, in all its inflections and shades of emotion. What you do not feel yourself, your listeners will not get. You must be fully absorbed in the interpretation."[4]

When his friend Claude Debussy was composing new pieces for the piano, he would often ask Philipp for advice on notation so that pianists would be able to better understand his nuances and approach. After considerable deliberation, they both decided that almost no pedal markings should be used in any of the published pieces. Their reasoning is that every piano is different in quality, every room or hall is different in size and resonance, and each pianist has different capabilities. To lock in one form of pedaling to cover all possible circumstances would place the pedaling notation above the effects that Debussy wished to achieve. They decided that pedaling only where it is absolutely necessary, and gave discretion to the pianist to use it as needed. Although this has often been abused by some pianists who use it to cloud the harmonies, or achieve a very dry sound, it remains a point of discussion for every pianist who chooses to perform Debussy's piano works.

Harold Bradley (pianist) stated that Philipp didn't necessarily always take the 'best' students as his pupils. Sometimes, he would accept a student who had only a few years of instruction and was at the intermediate level, and often he would refuse to teach even top level pianists. For Philipp, the most important attribute of a student wasn't his or her particular level of accomplishment, but whether they were teachable or not. Bradley said that Philipp could often tell a pianist's personality just by listening to him play. Bradley created an institute (Bradley Institute of Music) that embodied the educational philosophies of Isidor Philipp.[5] The institute's staff worked closely with Philipp to create a musical education that worked from pre-school aged children on.

Association, students and friends edit

Philipp allowed his name to be associated with the Bradley Institute for Music Education Research, Ltd., which was founded in Paris, in 1930, but moved to Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada, under the guidance of his pupil Harold Bradley (pianist). The Institute was devoted not only to teaching music, but also to documenting the vast knowledge of teaching traditions that Philipp had learned during his long life. Philipp's friend, violinist John Corigliano Sr., was among the original Board of Directors. Pianist Grace Barnes and violinist Deryck Aird served as music teachers along with Bradley for several decades.

The list of Isidor Philipp's students who became notable pianists, composers or conductors is very long, and includes Stell Andersen, Dwight Anderson, Grace Barnes, Emma Boynet, Harold Bradley (pianist), John Buttrick, Serge Conus, Aaron Copland, Jeanne-Marie Darré, Pierre Dervaux, Ania Dorfmann, Rolande Falcinelli, Felix Fox, Jean Françaix, Norman Fraser, Henri Gagnon, Florence Parr Gere, Youra Guller, Grace Hofheimer, Georges Hugon, Fernando Laires, Malvina Leshock, Yvonne Loriod, Nikita Magaloff, Federico Mompou, Léo-Pol Morin, Guiomar Novaes, Ozan Marsh, Wilfrid Pelletier, Émile Poillot, Harrison Potter, noted philosopher Albert Schweitzer, Phyllis Sellick, Soulima Stravinsky, Louise Talma, Alexander Tcherepnin, Dorothy Wanderman, Mabel Madison Watson, Beveridge Webster, and Victor Young.[6][7][8][9][10]

Additionally, many prominent and well established pianists would seek out his advice, particularly on playing French composers, which included Claude Debussy. Philipp often championed new music throughout his long life, and would frequently edit the works of contemporary composers, such as Sergei Prokofiev and Maurice Ravel. He was close friends with many of the leading pianists and composers of his day, including Leopold Godowsky, Ferruccio Busoni, Josef Hofmann, Ignacy Jan Paderewski, Alfred Cortot, Lazare-Lévy, Emile-Robert Blanchet, Béla Bartók, Nadia Boulanger, Jules Massenet, Cécile Chaminade, Gabriel Fauré and Charles-Marie Widor.[citation needed]

Philipp was friends with Stravinsky, and Stravinsky practiced the exercises from the Complete School of Tecnique almost daily. Contemporary commentators have noted that influence of these exercises on Stravinsky's compositions is clear.

Pianist Rudolf Serkin said that not having studied with Philipp was one of the regrets of his life. Later, he knew several of Philipp's students in Vienna, and said 'all of them were brilliant.'[citation needed]

The University of Louisville Isidor Philipp Archive is held at the Dwight Anderson Music Library in Louisville, Kentucky.

Compositions, piano editions and recordings edit

His compositions include Rêverie mélancolique and Sérénade humoristique for orchestra, a concertino for three pianos (which has been recently performed in the USA),[11] The Fantasmagories Suite, Suite for Two Pianos, 6 Concert Studies after Chopin's Études, Concert Étude after Chopin's Minute Waltz, 2 Valse-Caprices on Themes of Schubert, 4 Valse-Caprices on themes of Strauss, and arrangements and transcriptions such as the Scherzo from Felix Mendelssohn's A Midsummer Night's Dream for two pianos, and a large number of works by Bach transcribed for one or two pianos.[12] His composition Feux-Follets (from "Pastels For Piano", no. 3) was recorded[13] by his pupil Guiomar Novaes, a Brazilian pianist. He wrote a considerable number of transcriptions for the left hand.[14] Philipp's compositions and transcriptions often require a high degree of finger dexterity and lightness of touch, and he liked to work in rapid successions of double thirds, fourths and octaves in many of his pieces.

Leopold Godowsky's Suite for the Left Hand and Pierre Augiéras' Twenty-five Studies for the left Hand alone were dedicated to Isidor Philipp.[15] Philipp is best known for his technical exercises and educational works.[3][16][17] Additionally, he published an anthology of French music from the 17th century to the end of the 19th. He was a regular contributor to The Étude, Le Ménéstral, The Musician, and Le Courrier Musical magazines, and published several short books on technique, including "Some Thoughts on Piano Playing."[18] He is probably best known for his publication of "The Complete School of Piano Technique", published by Theodore Presser.

He also edited music by Albéniz, Alkan, Bizet, Chabrier, Chaminade, Couperin, Debussy, Delibes, Dvořák, Fauré, Franck, Godard, Gouvy, d'Indy, Kabalevsky, Khachaturian, Lully, Massenet, Mozart, Pierné, Prokofiev, Pugno, Rachmaninoff, Rameau, Ravel, Saint-Saëns, Scarlatti, Schumann, Widor, and others.[19][20][21] Most of these edited works, especially the piano concertos, remain the standard interpretations today and have not been improved upon or updated.

Philipp recorded several works by his teacher Saint-Saëns: these include chamber music and the Scherzo for two pianos, with his assistant Marcelle Herrenschmidt (1895–1974).[22] Additionally, he recorded the Saint-Saëns Violin Sonata No. 1 and Cello Sonatas Nos. 1 and 2 for the Pearl label, as well as a collection of his own pieces and works of Italian masters of the renaissance. There exists a recording of Philipp playing the piano in the Bach 5th Brandenburg Concerto, which aired by the NBC Symphony Orchestra in the early 1930s and was made by recording off the radio. Philipp played the Mozart Piano Concerto No. 19 in F major, K 459 with the Pro Musica Orchestra, Jean-Baptiste Mari conductor. [1]

Philipp can be heard playing Saint-Saëns' Violin Sonata in D minor, Op. 75 Additionally, the first movement of Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 19 in F major, K. 459 can be heard, which is likely a radio broadcast made when he was 90 years old. He also recorded with Marcelle Herrenschmidt Saint-Saëns' Scherzo for Two Pianos, Op. 87.

References edit

  1. ^ Smith (2000) I, 75-6.
  2. ^ Isidor Philipp, pianist 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b Bach cantatas
  4. ^ Philipp, "Some Thoughts on Piano Playing," Durand et fils (1928)
  5. ^ "World Famous Musicians Teach at Harold Bradley School of Music", Lockport, N.Y. Union-Sun & Journal, July 20, 1957
  6. ^ University of Louisville
  7. ^ The Free Library
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-04-27. Retrieved 2009-04-16.
  9. ^ New York Public Library
  10. ^ Hyperion Records
  11. ^ Silvermine School of Music
  12. ^ Bach cantatas
  13. ^ Duo-Art reproducing piano roll 6849-4, 1925
  14. ^ Piano Pedagogy Forum
  15. ^ Godowsky - Original compositions 2009-05-15 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ IMSLP
  17. ^ The Pianist’s Guide to Transcriptions, Arrangements and Paraphrases
  18. ^ Durand et fils (1928)
  19. ^ Joyner Library Catalogue
  20. ^ Leisure and Cultural Services Department
  21. ^ alibris
  22. ^ arbiterrecords 2008-10-08 at the Wayback Machine

Sources edit

  • Smith, Ronald (2000). alkan: The Man, the Music (2 vols in 1). London: Kahn ad Averill. ISBN 9781871082739.
  • Timbrell, Charles (1996). "Isidor Philipp, His Life and Legacy." Journal of the American Liszt Society. N° 40, July–December 1996, pp. 48–83.
  • Spalding, Richard (n.d.). Commentary and Corrections to: Timbrell, Charles. "Isidor Philipp, His Life and Legacy (...)"
  • Reade, Randall, Student of Harold Bradley, from direct quotes, and interview with Rudolf Serkin.

External links edit

isidor, philipp, isidor, edmond, philipp, first, name, sometimes, spelled, isidore, september, 1863, february, 1958, french, pianist, composer, pedagogue, jewish, hungarian, descent, born, budapest, died, paris, 1910born, 1863, september, 1863budapest, austria. Isidor Edmond Philipp first name sometimes spelled Isidore 2 September 1863 20 February 1958 was a French pianist composer and pedagogue of Jewish Hungarian descent He was born in Budapest and died in Paris Isidor PhilippIsidor Philipp ca 1910Born 1863 09 02 2 September 1863Budapest Austrian EmpireDied20 February 1958 1958 02 20 aged 94 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchCitizenship FranceOccupation s Composer and Pedagogue Contents 1 Biography 2 The Chopin tradition 3 Teaching philosophy 4 Association students and friends 5 Compositions piano editions and recordings 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksBiography editIsidor Philipp was a child prodigy at the piano in his Hungarian homeland When he was old enough friends and family raised money for him to study piano at the professional level at the Conservatoire de Paris regarded as the finest music conservatory in Europe There he studied piano under Georges Mathias a pupil of Frederic Chopin and Friedrich Kalkbrenner at the Conservatoire de Paris and upon graduation won First Prize in piano performance in 1883 Other teachers included Camille Saint Saens Stephen Heller a pupil of Carl Czerny one of Beethoven s students and Theodore Ritter a pupil of Franz Liszt At the Conservatoire he met fellow student Claude Debussy They remained lifelong friends and Philipp not only played his piano works in public but consulted with Debussy on how best to notate them so that pianists would understand Debussy s intentions As a result Philipp was regarded as the leading authority on Debussy s piano music after his death After graduating from the Conservatoire Philipp commenced a career which took him to various European countries and he was a regular performer at the Colonne Lamoureux and Conservatoire concerts in Paris He was able to hear concerts recitals or master classes by many of the leading pianists of the day including Liszt and Anton Rubinstein He knew Charles Valentin Alkan a close friend of Chopin s and was a pall bearer at Alkan s funeral in 1888 he subsequently edited many of Alkan s works for republication 1 In 1890 Philipp formed a trio with violinist Loeb and cellist Bertelier which toured for about a decade He revived the Societe des Instruments a Vent from 1896 to 1901 However he eventually curtailed his concertizing as he found lasting satisfaction in teaching He returned to the Conservatoire de Paris where he was a pre eminent professor of piano from 1893 to 1934 one of the youngest ever appointed to that institution serving as Chair of the piano department for much of that time From 1921 to 1933 Philipp was also the head of the piano section at the American Conservatory of Fontainebleau which became famous for starting the careers of many notable American composers His home in Paris contained many ancient and unusual instruments and other musical artifacts When the Nazis entered Paris in World War II and Philipp fled to the United States in 1940 the Nazis confiscated the contents of his apartment and they were never recovered He left for the United States in 1941 and taught in New York and L Alliance Francais in Louiseville Quebec Canada During the war he taught piano in New York City and at the Conservatoire de musique du Quebec a Montreal While he was in New York he gave recitals with the violinist John Corigliano Sr Corigliano was the longtime concertmaster of the New York Philharmonic 2 After the war he spent the rest of his life between New York City and Paris Philipp married once but he obtained a divorce shortly afterwards On 20 March 1955 aged 91 he played the piano part in both Saint Saens D minor Sonata and Cesar Franck s Violin Sonata in New York returning to Paris a year later He gave his farewell recital at the age of 92 in Paris He died there in 1958 after a fall on the Paris metro 3 He is buried in Pere Lachaise Cemetery In 1977 the Isidor Philipp Archives were deposited at the University of Louisville by the American Liszt Society They gather his compositions for the piano his exercises and studies his editions of the works of Franz Liszt as well as exercises studies and works on other composers recordings correspondence photographs and other artifacts The Chopin tradition editPhilipp began piano lessons with George Mathias at age 16 In an interview with E H Lampard a columnist for the St Catharine s Standard Harold Bradley who was a student and associate of Philipp s for over 30 years stated that it was Mathias who had been the one student of Chopin who absorbed all the wisdom and value in piano pedagogy that Chopin had developed over his life Chopin s fame as a composer has obscured the fact that he was the first and greatest name to adopt the career of piano teaching as a profession He created an entirely new philosophy of musical thinking and was the first musician of sufficient stature to be able to penetrate into the thought of the keyboard composers who preceded him to the extent of seeing the individual merits of each Thus he extended the dimensions of piano teaching to a point where the whole concept of music education became affected citation needed As most of Chopin s students were amateurs or died early Mathias was the only one who could pass on this legacy Bradley continued This is not to be confused with the mere performance of Chopin s own compositions but an appreciation of the art of the keyboard composers up to his time and the genius to apply this knowledge At Chopin s death it was Mathias who was able to furnish information for the complete publication of his compositions but he also felt an obligation to preserve the contribution Chopin had made as a teacher and artist Mathias in turn trained young pianists but it proved to be Isidor Philipp that was best equipped to carry on the Chopin philosophy of teaching Philipp then worked with Mathias that the latter had worked with Chopin By the age of 30 because of his studies Mathias and other prominent teachers Philipp was recognized as the supreme authority on the piano and its literature citation needed Teaching philosophy editThis article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message In interviews his students remember him with a great deal of affection and remark about his gentle and patient manner as a teacher Students commented that he stressed suppleness firmness rhythmic exactitude and articulation He insisted on practicing with the metronome first slowly then incrementally faster for all technical exercises and in learning any new piece He taught that octaves should be played from the wrist with a motionless arm and that fingers should attain true independence of one another Like other great teachers he did not have a system but taught what the student needed at the time Paul Loyonnet stated his ideals were velocity sobriety of expression and the jeu perle style As for interpretations he stressed that the student must know the piece intimately and thoroughly before it can be properly played but did not force any particular interpretation Philipp s repertoire was wide from the earliest keyboard masters to contemporary composers He believed that every pianist should be conversant in all styles and eras of piano and did not shy from playing Bach or other early composers on a modern grand One of his teaching points was that pianists should play any piece of music the way the composer intended and seeking out what the composer intended is often a lifelong process Nonetheless each pianist should have his own views on the pieces and not just copy what another has done Philipp wrote The quality most desirable in piano playing is tone Tone should be worked at from the first and the pupil must listen attentively to it To produce a beautiful tone Thalberg said one should in a way knead the keyboard with a hand of velvet the key being rather felt than struck It is essential to maintain the utmost relaxation in the arms wrists and hands Fernando Laires said that Philipp insisted that the music and the tone should arise from deep within the piano not pounded out at the keyboard and by that he meant that he must come deep within one s soul not at the fingertips Rubato Philipp wrote does not mean playing out of time but rather any ritenuto that we may be impelled to make must be compensated by a corresponding accelerando and also the opposite the bass keeping exactly the time Although Philipp abhorred distortions in interpreting pieces he believed that even when all the interpretive signs are exactly observed there remains ample scope for self expression and liberty You must be living and feeling the drama or the poem or the piece you play in all its inflections and shades of emotion What you do not feel yourself your listeners will not get You must be fully absorbed in the interpretation 4 When his friend Claude Debussy was composing new pieces for the piano he would often ask Philipp for advice on notation so that pianists would be able to better understand his nuances and approach After considerable deliberation they both decided that almost no pedal markings should be used in any of the published pieces Their reasoning is that every piano is different in quality every room or hall is different in size and resonance and each pianist has different capabilities To lock in one form of pedaling to cover all possible circumstances would place the pedaling notation above the effects that Debussy wished to achieve They decided that pedaling only where it is absolutely necessary and gave discretion to the pianist to use it as needed Although this has often been abused by some pianists who use it to cloud the harmonies or achieve a very dry sound it remains a point of discussion for every pianist who chooses to perform Debussy s piano works Harold Bradley pianist stated that Philipp didn t necessarily always take the best students as his pupils Sometimes he would accept a student who had only a few years of instruction and was at the intermediate level and often he would refuse to teach even top level pianists For Philipp the most important attribute of a student wasn t his or her particular level of accomplishment but whether they were teachable or not Bradley said that Philipp could often tell a pianist s personality just by listening to him play Bradley created an institute Bradley Institute of Music that embodied the educational philosophies of Isidor Philipp 5 The institute s staff worked closely with Philipp to create a musical education that worked from pre school aged children on Association students and friends editPhilipp allowed his name to be associated with the Bradley Institute for Music Education Research Ltd which was founded in Paris in 1930 but moved to Niagara Falls Ontario Canada under the guidance of his pupil Harold Bradley pianist The Institute was devoted not only to teaching music but also to documenting the vast knowledge of teaching traditions that Philipp had learned during his long life Philipp s friend violinist John Corigliano Sr was among the original Board of Directors Pianist Grace Barnes and violinist Deryck Aird served as music teachers along with Bradley for several decades The list of Isidor Philipp s students who became notable pianists composers or conductors is very long and includes Stell Andersen Dwight Anderson Grace Barnes Emma Boynet Harold Bradley pianist John Buttrick Serge Conus Aaron Copland Jeanne Marie Darre Pierre Dervaux Ania Dorfmann Rolande Falcinelli Felix Fox Jean Francaix Norman Fraser Henri Gagnon Florence Parr Gere Youra Guller Grace Hofheimer Georges Hugon Fernando Laires Malvina Leshock Yvonne Loriod Nikita Magaloff Federico Mompou Leo Pol Morin Guiomar Novaes Ozan Marsh Wilfrid Pelletier Emile Poillot Harrison Potter noted philosopher Albert Schweitzer Phyllis Sellick Soulima Stravinsky Louise Talma Alexander Tcherepnin Dorothy Wanderman Mabel Madison Watson Beveridge Webster and Victor Young 6 7 8 9 10 Additionally many prominent and well established pianists would seek out his advice particularly on playing French composers which included Claude Debussy Philipp often championed new music throughout his long life and would frequently edit the works of contemporary composers such as Sergei Prokofiev and Maurice Ravel He was close friends with many of the leading pianists and composers of his day including Leopold Godowsky Ferruccio Busoni Josef Hofmann Ignacy Jan Paderewski Alfred Cortot Lazare Levy Emile Robert Blanchet Bela Bartok Nadia Boulanger Jules Massenet Cecile Chaminade Gabriel Faure and Charles Marie Widor citation needed Philipp was friends with Stravinsky and Stravinsky practiced the exercises from the Complete School of Tecnique almost daily Contemporary commentators have noted that influence of these exercises on Stravinsky s compositions is clear Pianist Rudolf Serkin said that not having studied with Philipp was one of the regrets of his life Later he knew several of Philipp s students in Vienna and said all of them were brilliant citation needed The University of Louisville Isidor Philipp Archive is held at the Dwight Anderson Music Library in Louisville Kentucky Compositions piano editions and recordings editHis compositions include Reverie melancolique and Serenade humoristique for orchestra a concertino for three pianos which has been recently performed in the USA 11 The Fantasmagories Suite Suite for Two Pianos 6 Concert Studies after Chopin s Etudes Concert Etude after Chopin s Minute Waltz 2 Valse Caprices on Themes of Schubert 4 Valse Caprices on themes of Strauss and arrangements and transcriptions such as the Scherzo from Felix Mendelssohn s A Midsummer Night s Dream for two pianos and a large number of works by Bach transcribed for one or two pianos 12 His composition Feux Follets from Pastels For Piano no 3 was recorded 13 by his pupil Guiomar Novaes a Brazilian pianist He wrote a considerable number of transcriptions for the left hand 14 Philipp s compositions and transcriptions often require a high degree of finger dexterity and lightness of touch and he liked to work in rapid successions of double thirds fourths and octaves in many of his pieces Leopold Godowsky s Suite for the Left Hand and Pierre Augieras Twenty five Studies for the left Hand alone were dedicated to Isidor Philipp 15 Philipp is best known for his technical exercises and educational works 3 16 17 Additionally he published an anthology of French music from the 17th century to the end of the 19th He was a regular contributor to The Etude Le Menestral The Musician and Le Courrier Musical magazines and published several short books on technique including Some Thoughts on Piano Playing 18 He is probably best known for his publication of The Complete School of Piano Technique published by Theodore Presser He also edited music by Albeniz Alkan Bizet Chabrier Chaminade Couperin Debussy Delibes Dvorak Faure Franck Godard Gouvy d Indy Kabalevsky Khachaturian Lully Massenet Mozart Pierne Prokofiev Pugno Rachmaninoff Rameau Ravel Saint Saens Scarlatti Schumann Widor and others 19 20 21 Most of these edited works especially the piano concertos remain the standard interpretations today and have not been improved upon or updated Philipp recorded several works by his teacher Saint Saens these include chamber music and the Scherzo for two pianos with his assistant Marcelle Herrenschmidt 1895 1974 22 Additionally he recorded the Saint Saens Violin Sonata No 1 and Cello Sonatas Nos 1 and 2 for the Pearl label as well as a collection of his own pieces and works of Italian masters of the renaissance There exists a recording of Philipp playing the piano in the Bach 5th Brandenburg Concerto which aired by the NBC Symphony Orchestra in the early 1930s and was made by recording off the radio Philipp played the Mozart Piano Concerto No 19 in F major K 459 with the Pro Musica Orchestra Jean Baptiste Mari conductor 1 Philipp can be heard playing Saint Saens Violin Sonata in D minor Op 75 Additionally the first movement of Mozart s Piano Concerto No 19 in F major K 459 can be heard which is likely a radio broadcast made when he was 90 years old He also recorded with Marcelle Herrenschmidt Saint Saens Scherzo for Two Pianos Op 87 References edit Smith 2000 I 75 6 Isidor Philipp pianist Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine a b Bach cantatas Philipp Some Thoughts on Piano Playing Durand et fils 1928 World Famous Musicians Teach at Harold Bradley School of Music Lockport N Y Union Sun amp Journal July 20 1957 University of Louisville The Free Library Yvonne Loriod Messiaen Archived from the original on 2007 04 27 Retrieved 2009 04 16 New York Public Library Hyperion Records Silvermine School of Music Bach cantatas Duo Art reproducing piano roll 6849 4 1925 Piano Pedagogy Forum Godowsky Original compositions Archived 2009 05 15 at the Wayback Machine IMSLP The Pianist s Guide to Transcriptions Arrangements and Paraphrases Durand et fils 1928 Joyner Library Catalogue Leisure and Cultural Services Department alibris arbiterrecords Archived 2008 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Sources edit Smith Ronald 2000 alkan The Man the Music 2 vols in 1 London Kahn ad Averill ISBN 9781871082739 Timbrell Charles 1996 Isidor Philipp His Life and Legacy Journal of the American Liszt Society N 40 July December 1996 pp 48 83 Spalding Richard n d Commentary and Corrections to Timbrell Charles Isidor Philipp His Life and Legacy Reade Randall Student of Harold Bradley from direct quotes and interview with Rudolf Serkin External links editIsidor Philipp pianist webpage with photos Isidore Philipp Archive at University of Louisville Free scores by Isidor Philipp at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP List of Philipp s Bach transcriptions Bradley Institute fonds 1935 1938 1940 1950 1952 2006 2008 n d RG 349 Brock University Library Digital Repository Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isidor Philipp amp oldid 1217846958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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