William Kapell: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|American classical pianist and recording artist (1922–1953)}} |
{{short description|American classical pianist and recording artist (1922–1953)}} |
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{{other people||William Capell (disambiguation)}} |
{{other people||William Capell (disambiguation)}} |
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{{use mdy dates|date=October 2023}} |
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[[File:William Kapell 1948.JPG|thumb|Kapell in 1948.]] |
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{{Infobox person |
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<!-- please do not add an infobox, per [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Classical music#Biographical_infoboxes]]-->'''William Kapell''' (September 20, 1922{{spaced ndash}}October 29, 1953) was an American [[pianist]] and recording artist, killed at the age of 31 in the crash of a commercial airliner returning from a concert tour in Australia. |
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| name = William Kapell |
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| image = William Kapell 1948.JPG |
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| alt = |
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| caption = Kapell in 1948 |
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| birth_name = Oscar William Kapell |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date|1922|9|20}} |
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| birth_place = [[New York City]], U.S. |
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| death_date = {{Death date and age|1953|10|29|1922|9|20}} |
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| death_place = [[Kings Mountain, California]], U.S. |
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| occupation = Pianist |
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| spouse = {{marriage|[[Anna Lou Dehavenon|Rebecca Ann Lou Melson]]|1948}} |
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| children = 2 |
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| years_active = 1937–1953 |
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| website = |
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}} |
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[[File:Signed drawing of William Kapell by Manuel Rosenberg for Cincinnati Post 1926.jpg|thumb|Signed drawing of William Kapell by [[Manuel Rosenberg]], 1926]] |
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'''Oscar William Kapell'''<ref>{{Cite book |last=Masters |first=Richard |title=Encyclopedia of American classical pianists: 1800s to the present |date=2023 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-5381-7146-2 |location=Lanham | page=187}}</ref> (September 20, 1922{{spaced ndash}}October 29, 1953) was an American classical pianist. ''[[The Washington Post]]'' described him as "America's first great pianist",<ref>{{Cite news |date=2024-01-09 |title=WILLIAM KAPELL'S PIANO BENCHMARK |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/lifestyle/style/1998/09/27/william-kapells-piano-benchmark/731a1d1d-2b5d-40b7-85de-397a664b3522/ |access-date=2024-05-31 |work=Washington Post |language=en-US |issn=0190-8286|quote=America's first great pianist has finally been accorded the tribute he deserves. }}</ref> while ''[[The New York Times]]'' described him as "one of the last century's great geniuses of the keyboard"<ref>{{Cite news |last=Wakin |first=Daniel J. |date=2004-11-10 |title=The Found Treasures of a Great Pianist |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/10/arts/music/the-found-treasures-of-a-great-pianist.html |access-date=2024-05-31 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331|quote=When the 31-year-old pianist William Kapell, one of the last century's great geniuses of the keyboard, was killed in a plane crash in 1953, he was returning from a concert tour in Australia.}}</ref> and ''Times'' critic and pianist [[Michael Kimmelman]], writing in ''[[The New York Review of Books]]'', remarked: "Was there any greater American pianist born during the last century than Kapell? Perhaps not."<ref>{{Cite news |last=Kimmelman |first=Michael |date=2005-03-24 |title=The Undefeated |url=https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2005/03/24/the-undefeated/ |access-date=2024-05-31 |work=The New York Review of Books |language=en |volume=52 |issue=5 |issn=0028-7504|quote=Was there any greater American pianist born during the last century than Kapell? Perhaps not. Certainly he was the most famous American-born player before Van Cliburn.}}</ref> In 1953, at age 31, Kapell died in the crash of [[BCPA Flight 304]] while returning from a concert tour in Australia. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
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William Kapell was born in New York City on September 20, 1922, and grew up in the eastside neighborhood of [[Yorkville, Manhattan]], where his parents owned a [[Lexington Avenue]] bookstore.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=15}} His father was of Spanish-Russian Jewish ancestry and his mother of Polish descent.<ref>[http://www.naxos.com/artistinfo/William_Kapell/1667.htm William Kapell] at Naxos.com</ref><ref name=tpage>Tim Page, [http://www.williamkapell.com/articles/timpage.html "William Kapell's Piano Benchmark"], ''[[The Washington Post]]'', September 27, 1998 (at williamkapell.com).</ref> Dorothea Anderson La Follette (the wife of [[Chester La Follette]]) met Kapell at the [[Third Street Music School Settlement|Third Street Music School]] and became his teacher, giving him lessons several times a week at her studio on West 64th Street.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=18}} Kapell later studied with [[Olga Samaroff]], former wife of conductor [[Leopold Stokowski]], at the [[Juilliard School]]. |
William Kapell was born in New York City on September 20, 1922, and grew up in the eastside neighborhood of [[Yorkville, Manhattan]], where his parents owned a [[Lexington Avenue]] bookstore.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=15}} His father was of Spanish-Russian Jewish ancestry and his mother of Polish descent.<ref>[http://www.naxos.com/artistinfo/William_Kapell/1667.htm William Kapell] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080704151641/http://www.naxos.com/artistinfo/William_Kapell/1667.htm |date=2008-07-04 }} at Naxos.com</ref><ref name=tpage>Tim Page, [http://www.williamkapell.com/articles/timpage.html "William Kapell's Piano Benchmark"], ''[[The Washington Post]]'', September 27, 1998 (at williamkapell.com).</ref> Dorothea Anderson La Follette (the wife of [[Chester La Follette]]) met Kapell at the [[Third Street Music School Settlement|Third Street Music School]] and became his teacher, giving him lessons several times a week at her studio on West 64th Street.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=18}} Kapell later studied with [[Olga Samaroff]], former wife of conductor [[Leopold Stokowski]], at the [[Juilliard School]]. |
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Kapell won his first competition at the age of ten and received as a prize a turkey dinner with the pianist [[José Iturbi]]. In 1941, he won the [[Philadelphia Orchestra]]'s youth competition as well as the |
Kapell won his first competition at the age of ten and received as a prize a turkey dinner with the pianist [[José Iturbi]]. In 1941, he won the [[Philadelphia Orchestra]]'s youth competition as well as the Naumburg Award. The following year, the [[Walter W. Naumburg Foundation]] sponsored the 19-year-old pianist's New York début, a recital which won him the [[The Town Hall (New York City)|Town Hall Award]] for the year's outstanding concert by a musician under 30. He was signed to an exclusive recording contract with [[RCA Victor]].<ref name=tpage /> |
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Kapell achieved fame while in his early twenties, in part as a result of his performances of [[Aram Khachaturian]]'s [[Piano Concerto (Khachaturian)|Piano Concerto in D-flat]]. His 1946 world premiere recording of the piece with [[Serge Koussevitzky]] and the [[Boston Symphony Orchestra]] was a sell-out hit.<ref> |
Kapell achieved fame while in his early twenties, in part as a result of his performances of [[Aram Khachaturian]]'s [[Piano Concerto (Khachaturian)|Piano Concerto in D-flat]]. His 1946 world premiere recording of the piece with [[Serge Koussevitzky]] and the [[Boston Symphony Orchestra]] was a sell-out hit.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=5821&source=ClassicalNet|url-status=dead|title=William Kapell Edition Vol 4 – Khachaturian, Prokofiev—Notes & Reviews|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180823210330/http://www.arkivmusic.com/classical/album.jsp?album_id=5821&source=ClassicalNet|archive-date=2018-08-23|website=[[ArkivMusic]]}}</ref> Eventually, he became so associated with the work that he was referred to in some circles as "Khachaturian Kapell." Besides his pianism and technical gifts, Kapell's attractive appearance and mop of black hair helped make him a favorite with the public.<ref name=tpage /> |
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By the late 1940s, Kapell had toured the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia to |
By the late 1940s, Kapell had toured the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia to acclaim and praised as the most brilliant and audacious of his generation of young American pianists.<ref>[[Jean-Pierre Thiollet]], ''88 notes pour piano solo'', "Solo nec plus ultra", Neva Editions, 2015, p. 51. {{ISBN|978 2 3505 5192 0}}.</ref> On May 18, 1948, he married [[Anna Lou Dehavenon|Rebecca Anna Lou Melson]], with whom he had two children. She was a pianist herself, having been a student of [[Sergei Tarnowsky]], the teacher of [[Vladimir Horowitz]]. |
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Early on, there was a tendency to typecast Kapell as a performer of technically difficult repertoire. While his technique was exceptional, he was a |
Early on, there was a tendency to typecast Kapell as a performer of technically difficult repertoire.{{Citation needed|date=July 2024}} While his technique was exceptional, he was a versatile musician, and was impatient with what he considered shallow or sloppy music making. His own repertoire was diverse, encompassing works from [[Johann Sebastian Bach|J. S. Bach]] to [[Aaron Copland]], who so admired Kapell's performances of his Piano Sonata that he was writing a new work for him at the time of the pianist's death. Kapell practiced up to eight hours a day,<ref name="tpage" /> keeping track of his sessions with a notebook and clock. He also set aside time from his busy concert schedule to work with the musicians he most admired, including [[Artur Schnabel]], [[Pablo Casals]], and [[Rudolf Serkin]]. Kapell also approached [[Arthur Rubinstein]] and Vladimir Horowitz (whose East 94th Street townhouse was diagonally across the street from the Kapells' apartment) for lessons, but they demurred. Horowitz later commented that there was nothing he could have taught Kapell.{{cn|date=July 2024}} |
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From August to October 1953, Kapell toured Australia, playing 37 concerts in 14 weeks, appearing in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, [[Bendigo]], [[Shepparton]], [[Albury]], [[Horsham, Victoria|Horsham]] and finally in [[Geelong]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.classicstoday.com/review/review-14373/|title=Review: ''William Kapell Rediscovered: The Australian Broadcasts''|author=Jed Distler|website=Classics Today|access-date=12 July 2021}}</ref> |
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Kapell suffered from asthma and rheumatic fever during his life.{{sfn|Downes|2013|loc=33}} In 1952, Kapell reportedly suffered from a serious lung condition. He was diagnosed with bronchitis in April and a doctor advised him to stop playing. In August, he wrote in his diary to tend to a "lung condition – immediately". Three months prior, in May, he allegedly told Anthony Harris, a pianist from Sacramento who he had dinner with, that he was suffering from cancer and that the doctors had given him two years to live.{{sfn|Downes|2013|loc=115–117}} |
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⚫ | From August to October 1953, Kapell toured Australia, playing 37 concerts in 14 weeks. He appeared in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, [[Bendigo]], [[Shepparton]], [[Albury]], [[Horsham, Victoria|Horsham]] and finally in [[Geelong]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.classicstoday.com/review/review-14373/|title=Review: ''William Kapell Rediscovered: The Australian Broadcasts''|author=Jed Distler|website=Classics Today|access-date=12 July 2021}}</ref> Kapell played the final concert of his Australian tour in Geelong, Victoria, on October 22, 1953, a recital which included a performance of [[Frédéric Chopin|Chopin]]'s [[Piano Sonata No. 2 (Chopin)|"Funeral March" Sonata]].<ref>{{Cite news|first=John|last=McBeath|title=Last notes of a prodigy|work=[[The Australian]]|date=February 16, 2013|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/arts/books/last-notes-of-a-prodigy/story-e6frg8nf-1226578113201}}</ref> Days after the concert, he set off on his return flight to the United States, telling reporters at Mascot Airport he would never return to Australia because of the harsh comments from some Australian critics.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=115}} He was aboard [[BCPA Flight 304]] when on the morning of October 29, 1953, the plane, descending to land in fog, struck the treetops and crashed on [[Kings Mountain, California|Kings Mountain]], south of the San Francisco airport. Everyone on board died.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/18395159/1064917|title=19 Killed In B.C.P.A. Crash in U.S.A.|newspaper=[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]|agency=[[Australian Associated Press]]|date=October 31, 1953|page=1|via=[[Trove]]|access-date=October 8, 2023}}</ref><ref>[https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/18395245 "Kapell: Truly American Craftsman Of Music"], obituary in ''[[The Sydney Morning Herald]]'', October 31, 1953, p. 2. Retrieved 2012-08-17</ref> His friend, broadcaster [[Alistair Cooke]], covered Kapell's death in his ''[[Letter from America]]'' on October 30, 1953. On November 2, Kapell's funeral took place at the [[Stephen Wise Free Synagogue]] in New York; interment followed at the Mount Ararat Cemetery near [[Farmingdale, New York]].{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=16}} |
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⚫ | Kapell played the final concert of his Australian tour in Geelong, Victoria, on October 22, 1953, a recital which included a performance of [[Frédéric Chopin|Chopin]]'s [[Piano Sonata No. 2 (Chopin)|"Funeral March" Sonata]].<ref>{{Cite news|first=John|last=McBeath|title=Last notes of a prodigy|work=[[The Australian]]|date=February 16, 2013|url=http://www.theaustralian.com.au/arts/books/last-notes-of-a-prodigy/story-e6frg8nf-1226578113201}}</ref> Days after the concert, he set off on his return flight to the United States, telling reporters at Mascot Airport he would never return to Australia because of the harsh comments from some Australian critics.{{sfn|Downes|2013|p=115}} He was aboard [[BCPA Flight 304]] when on the morning of October 29, 1953, the plane, descending to land in fog, struck the treetops and crashed on [[Kings Mountain, California|Kings Mountain]], south of the San Francisco airport. Everyone on board died.<ref |
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Musician [[Isaac Stern]] set up the William Kapell Memorial Fund to bring musicians to the United States for wider experience. The Australian violinist [[Ernest Llewellyn]], a friend of Stern's, was the inaugural recipient in 1955.<ref>W. L. Hoffmann, "Lest we forget Isaac Stern", ''[[The Canberra Times]]'', October 24, 2001.</ref> |
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Pianists including [[Eugene Istomin]], [[Gary Graffman]], [[Leon Fleisher]] and [[Van Cliburn]] have acknowledged Kapell's influence. Fleisher stated that Kapell was "the greatest pianistic talent that this country has ever produced".<ref>[[David Dubal|Dubal, David]]. ''Reflections from the Keyboard'', {{ISBN|0-8256-7211-2}}</ref> Kapell's widow, [[Anna Lou Dehavenon]] (1926–2012), undertook a career as an expert on homelessness in New York in part as a result, she said, of her own experience of suddenly becoming a single mother with no income. For the rest of her life she worked to keep her late husband's recordings before the public. |
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Kapell's estate sued [[British Commonwealth Pacific Airlines|BCPA]], [[Qantas]] (which had taken over BCPA in 1954), and [[British Overseas Airways Corporation|BOAC]] (which was alleged to have sold Kapell the ticket).<ref name="times54372" /> In 1964, more than ten years after the crash, Kapell's widow and two children were awarded US$924,396 in damages.<ref name="times55923" /> The award was overturned on appeal in 1965.<ref name="nytimes100665" /> |
Kapell's estate sued [[British Commonwealth Pacific Airlines|BCPA]], [[Qantas]] (which had taken over BCPA in 1954), and [[British Overseas Airways Corporation|BOAC]] (which was alleged to have sold Kapell the ticket).<ref name="times54372" /> In 1964, more than ten years after the crash, Kapell's widow and two children were awarded US$924,396 in damages.<ref name="times55923" /> The award was overturned on appeal in 1965.<ref name="nytimes100665" /> |
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==Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival== |
==Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival== |
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In 1986, the [[University of Maryland]]'s piano competition was renamed the William Kapell International Piano Competition in Kapell's honor. It became quadrennial in 1998 and is currently held at the university's [[Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center]].<ref> |
In 1986, the [[University of Maryland]]'s piano competition was renamed the William Kapell International Piano Competition in Kapell's honor. It became quadrennial in 1998 and is currently held at the university's [[Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/2010/c/kapell/about/competition-history |title=Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at Maryland – The William Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival – About the Competition and Festival |access-date=2012-01-15 |archive-date=2012-06-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120623000918/http://claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/2010/c/kapell/about/competition-history |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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==Recordings== |
==Recordings== |
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{{see also|William Kapell discography}} |
{{see also|William Kapell discography}} |
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In 1944, Kapell signed an exclusive recording contract with [[RCA Red Seal|RCA Victor]]. Many of his recordings were originally issued as [[78rpm#78 rpm disc developments|78RPM]] records. Some were issued on [[LP record|LP]], but by 1960, all of Kapell's commercial recordings were out of print. RCA Victor reissued [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]]'s [[Piano Concerto No. 2 (Beethoven)|Piano Concerto No. 2]] and [[Sergei Prokofiev|Prokofiev]]'s [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Prokofiev)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] |
In 1944, Kapell signed an exclusive recording contract with [[RCA Red Seal|RCA Victor]]. Many of his recordings were originally issued as [[78rpm#78 rpm disc developments|78RPM]] records. Some were issued on [[LP record|LP]], but by 1960, all of Kapell's commercial recordings were out of print. In 1962, RCA Victor reissued the Kapell/Koussevitzky recording of the Khachaturian Piano Concerto. [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]]'s [[Piano Concerto No. 2 (Beethoven)|Piano Concerto No. 2]] and [[Sergei Prokofiev|Prokofiev]]'s [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Prokofiev)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] were reissued on the [[RCA Victrola]] label in 1970. For decades, pirated copies of the Kapell's commercial RCA Victor recordings and unlicensed recordings of "live" performances circulated among collectors. |
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In the 1980s, RCA Victor |
In the 1980s, RCA Victor issued two compact discs of Kapell's recordings, including the [[Piano Concerto (Khachaturian)|Khatchaturian]] and Prokofiev Third Piano Concertos, and an all-[[Frédéric Chopin|Chopin]] disc. |
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A |
A 9 [[compact disc|CD]] set released by RCA Victor in 1998 contains Kapell's complete authorized recordings, including renditions of Chopin's [[mazurka]]s and [[Piano sonata|sonatas]] as well as [[Piano concerto|concertos]] by [[Sergei Rachmaninoff|Rachmaninoff]], Prokofiev, and [[Aram Khachaturian|Khatchaturian]]. It also has many lesser-known items, some of them first releases, including [[Dmitri Shostakovich|Shostakovich]] [[Prelude (music)|preludes]], [[Domenico Scarlatti|Scarlatti]] sonatas, and the [[Aaron Copland|Copland]] Piano Sonata. The set sold well throughout the world and brought Kapell's work to a new audience. |
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VAI 1027 contains broadcast recordings of the Rachmaninoff [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] and the Khatchaturian Piano Concerto. Arbiter 108 features part of the Beethoven [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Beethoven)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] and the Shostakovich Concerto No. 1, and it includes [[Modest Mussorgsky|Mussorgsky]]'s ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'', which also appears in the RCA Victor set, as well as on VAI 1048, the last from an Australian recital of July 21, 1953. |
VAI 1027 contains broadcast recordings of the Rachmaninoff [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Rachmaninoff)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] and the Khatchaturian Piano Concerto. Arbiter 108 features part of the Beethoven [[Piano Concerto No. 3 (Beethoven)|Piano Concerto No. 3]] and the Shostakovich Concerto No. 1, and it includes [[Modest Mussorgsky|Mussorgsky]]'s ''[[Pictures at an Exhibition]]'', which also appears in the RCA Victor set, as well as on VAI 1048, the last from an Australian recital of July 21, 1953. |
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In 2004, a number of recordings made during William Kapell's last Australian tour were returned to his family.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/10/arts/music/ |
In 2004, a number of broadcast recordings made during William Kapell's last Australian tour were returned to his family.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/10/arts/music/the-found-treasures-of-a-great-pianist.html|title=The Found Treasures of a Great Pianist|work=[[The New York Times]]|author=Daniel J. Wakin|date=November 10, 2004|access-date=2023-10-08}}</ref> RCA Victor issued these recordings in 2008 under the title ''Kapell Rediscovered''. Included are several previously unknown performances of "[[God Save the Queen]]", Debussy's ''[[Suite bergamasque]]'', Chopin's [[Barcarolle (Chopin)|Barcarolle]], Op. 60, and [[Scherzo No. 1 (Chopin)|Scherzo No. 1 in B minor]], Op. 20, and Prokofiev's [[Piano Sonata No. 7 (Prokofiev)|Sonata No. 7, Op. 83]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sonybmgmasterworks.com/news/index.html#200926|title=Last Recordings of American Pianist William Kapell|publisher=Sony BMG|access-date=2008-03-20}}</ref> |
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In 2013, RCA issued a new 11 CD set of Kapell's complete recordings, including the broadcast recordings from the final Australian tour. |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{Cite newspaper The Times |
{{Cite newspaper The Times|newspaper=[[The Times]] |
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|title=$7M Suit Filed Against Three Airlines |
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|date=January 30, 1959 |
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{{Cite newspaper The Times |
{{Cite newspaper The Times|newspaper=[[The Times]] |
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|title=$924,396 for Pianist's Widow |
|title=$924,396 for Pianist's Widow |
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|author= |
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|department=News |
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|date=31 January 1964 |
|date=31 January 1964 |
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{{Commons category}} |
{{Commons category}} |
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{{Wikiquote}} |
{{Wikiquote}} |
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{{External media|image1=[http://resources3.news.com.au/images/2013/02/14/1226578/116843-130216-rev-kapell.jpg William Kapell]}} |
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*[http://www.williamkapell.com William Kapell Rediscovered] at williamkapell.com |
*[http://www.williamkapell.com William Kapell Rediscovered] at williamkapell.com |
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*[http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17853 "The Undefeated"] review of ''William Kapell Edition'' by [[Michael Kimmelman]], ''[[The New York Review of Books]]'', March 24, 2005 {{Subscription required}} |
*[http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17853 "The Undefeated"] review of ''William Kapell Edition'' by [[Michael Kimmelman]], ''[[The New York Review of Books]]'', March 24, 2005 {{Subscription required}} |
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*[http://claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/kapell-international-piano-competition-and-festival The William Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival] |
*[http://claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/kapell-international-piano-competition-and-festival The William Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130207065700/http://claricesmithcenter.umd.edu/kapell-international-piano-competition-and-festival |date=2013-02-07 }} |
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*{{YouTube|id=5IB_uUqP8iY|title=Video of William Kapell recital (10:19)}}, Scarlatti; [[Nocturnes, Op. 55 (Chopin)|Chopin's Nocturne No. 2, Op. 55]]; "Gato" arranged by Emilio A. Napolitano |
*{{YouTube|id=5IB_uUqP8iY|title=Video of William Kapell recital (10:19)}}, Scarlatti; [[Nocturnes, Op. 55 (Chopin)|Chopin's Nocturne No. 2, Op. 55]]; "Gato" arranged by Emilio A. Napolitano |
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*{{YouTube|id=sfl2wiAQ9eI|title=William Kapell Remembered, Part 1 (8:26)|link=no}} |
*{{YouTube|id=sfl2wiAQ9eI|title=William Kapell Remembered, Part 1 (8:26)|link=no}} |
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[[Category:Musicians from New York City]] |
[[Category:Musicians from New York City]] |
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[[Category:Juilliard School alumni]] |
[[Category:Juilliard School alumni]] |
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[[Category:American classical pianists]] |
[[Category:American male classical pianists]] |
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[[Category:Male classical pianists]] |
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[[Category:American male pianists]] |
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[[Category:20th-century American Jews]] |
[[Category:20th-century American Jews]] |
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[[Category:Jewish classical pianists]] |
[[Category:Jewish classical pianists]] |
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[[Category:Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in the United States]] |
[[Category:Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in the United States]] |
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[[Category:Accidental deaths in California]] |
[[Category:Accidental deaths in California]] |
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[[Category:20th-century classical pianists]] |
[[Category:20th-century American classical pianists]] |
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[[Category:20th-century American pianists]] |
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[[Category:Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in 1953]] |
[[Category:Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in 1953]] |
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[[Category:Classical musicians from New York (state)]] |
[[Category:Classical musicians from New York (state)]] |
Latest revision as of 11:50, 7 November 2024
William Kapell | |
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Born | Oscar William Kapell September 20, 1922 New York City, U.S. |
Died | October 29, 1953 | (aged 31)
Occupation | Pianist |
Years active | 1937–1953 |
Spouse | |
Children | 2 |
Oscar William Kapell[1] (September 20, 1922 – October 29, 1953) was an American classical pianist. The Washington Post described him as "America's first great pianist",[2] while The New York Times described him as "one of the last century's great geniuses of the keyboard"[3] and Times critic and pianist Michael Kimmelman, writing in The New York Review of Books, remarked: "Was there any greater American pianist born during the last century than Kapell? Perhaps not."[4] In 1953, at age 31, Kapell died in the crash of BCPA Flight 304 while returning from a concert tour in Australia.
Biography
[edit]William Kapell was born in New York City on September 20, 1922, and grew up in the eastside neighborhood of Yorkville, Manhattan, where his parents owned a Lexington Avenue bookstore.[5] His father was of Spanish-Russian Jewish ancestry and his mother of Polish descent.[6][7] Dorothea Anderson La Follette (the wife of Chester La Follette) met Kapell at the Third Street Music School and became his teacher, giving him lessons several times a week at her studio on West 64th Street.[8] Kapell later studied with Olga Samaroff, former wife of conductor Leopold Stokowski, at the Juilliard School.
Kapell won his first competition at the age of ten and received as a prize a turkey dinner with the pianist José Iturbi. In 1941, he won the Philadelphia Orchestra's youth competition as well as the Naumburg Award. The following year, the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation sponsored the 19-year-old pianist's New York début, a recital which won him the Town Hall Award for the year's outstanding concert by a musician under 30. He was signed to an exclusive recording contract with RCA Victor.[7]
Kapell achieved fame while in his early twenties, in part as a result of his performances of Aram Khachaturian's Piano Concerto in D-flat. His 1946 world premiere recording of the piece with Serge Koussevitzky and the Boston Symphony Orchestra was a sell-out hit.[9] Eventually, he became so associated with the work that he was referred to in some circles as "Khachaturian Kapell." Besides his pianism and technical gifts, Kapell's attractive appearance and mop of black hair helped make him a favorite with the public.[7]
By the late 1940s, Kapell had toured the United States, Canada, Europe and Australia to acclaim and praised as the most brilliant and audacious of his generation of young American pianists.[10] On May 18, 1948, he married Rebecca Anna Lou Melson, with whom he had two children. She was a pianist herself, having been a student of Sergei Tarnowsky, the teacher of Vladimir Horowitz.
Early on, there was a tendency to typecast Kapell as a performer of technically difficult repertoire.[citation needed] While his technique was exceptional, he was a versatile musician, and was impatient with what he considered shallow or sloppy music making. His own repertoire was diverse, encompassing works from J. S. Bach to Aaron Copland, who so admired Kapell's performances of his Piano Sonata that he was writing a new work for him at the time of the pianist's death. Kapell practiced up to eight hours a day,[7] keeping track of his sessions with a notebook and clock. He also set aside time from his busy concert schedule to work with the musicians he most admired, including Artur Schnabel, Pablo Casals, and Rudolf Serkin. Kapell also approached Arthur Rubinstein and Vladimir Horowitz (whose East 94th Street townhouse was diagonally across the street from the Kapells' apartment) for lessons, but they demurred. Horowitz later commented that there was nothing he could have taught Kapell.[citation needed]
Health, death and aftermath
[edit]Kapell suffered from asthma and rheumatic fever during his life.[11] In 1952, Kapell reportedly suffered from a serious lung condition. He was diagnosed with bronchitis in April and a doctor advised him to stop playing. In August, he wrote in his diary to tend to a "lung condition – immediately". Three months prior, in May, he allegedly told Anthony Harris, a pianist from Sacramento who he had dinner with, that he was suffering from cancer and that the doctors had given him two years to live.[12]
From August to October 1953, Kapell toured Australia, playing 37 concerts in 14 weeks. He appeared in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Bendigo, Shepparton, Albury, Horsham and finally in Geelong.[13] Kapell played the final concert of his Australian tour in Geelong, Victoria, on October 22, 1953, a recital which included a performance of Chopin's "Funeral March" Sonata.[14] Days after the concert, he set off on his return flight to the United States, telling reporters at Mascot Airport he would never return to Australia because of the harsh comments from some Australian critics.[15] He was aboard BCPA Flight 304 when on the morning of October 29, 1953, the plane, descending to land in fog, struck the treetops and crashed on Kings Mountain, south of the San Francisco airport. Everyone on board died.[16][17] His friend, broadcaster Alistair Cooke, covered Kapell's death in his Letter from America on October 30, 1953. On November 2, Kapell's funeral took place at the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in New York; interment followed at the Mount Ararat Cemetery near Farmingdale, New York.[18]
Musician Isaac Stern set up the William Kapell Memorial Fund to bring musicians to the United States for wider experience. The Australian violinist Ernest Llewellyn, a friend of Stern's, was the inaugural recipient in 1955.[19]
Pianists including Eugene Istomin, Gary Graffman, Leon Fleisher and Van Cliburn have acknowledged Kapell's influence. Fleisher stated that Kapell was "the greatest pianistic talent that this country has ever produced".[20] Kapell's widow, Anna Lou Dehavenon (1926–2012), undertook a career as an expert on homelessness in New York in part as a result, she said, of her own experience of suddenly becoming a single mother with no income. For the rest of her life she worked to keep her late husband's recordings before the public.
Kapell's estate sued BCPA, Qantas (which had taken over BCPA in 1954), and BOAC (which was alleged to have sold Kapell the ticket).[21] In 1964, more than ten years after the crash, Kapell's widow and two children were awarded US$924,396 in damages.[22] The award was overturned on appeal in 1965.[23]
Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival
[edit]In 1986, the University of Maryland's piano competition was renamed the William Kapell International Piano Competition in Kapell's honor. It became quadrennial in 1998 and is currently held at the university's Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center.[24]
Recordings
[edit]In 1944, Kapell signed an exclusive recording contract with RCA Victor. Many of his recordings were originally issued as 78RPM records. Some were issued on LP, but by 1960, all of Kapell's commercial recordings were out of print. In 1962, RCA Victor reissued the Kapell/Koussevitzky recording of the Khachaturian Piano Concerto. Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 2 and Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3 were reissued on the RCA Victrola label in 1970. For decades, pirated copies of the Kapell's commercial RCA Victor recordings and unlicensed recordings of "live" performances circulated among collectors.
In the 1980s, RCA Victor issued two compact discs of Kapell's recordings, including the Khatchaturian and Prokofiev Third Piano Concertos, and an all-Chopin disc.
A 9 CD set released by RCA Victor in 1998 contains Kapell's complete authorized recordings, including renditions of Chopin's mazurkas and sonatas as well as concertos by Rachmaninoff, Prokofiev, and Khatchaturian. It also has many lesser-known items, some of them first releases, including Shostakovich preludes, Scarlatti sonatas, and the Copland Piano Sonata. The set sold well throughout the world and brought Kapell's work to a new audience.
VAI 1027 contains broadcast recordings of the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 and the Khatchaturian Piano Concerto. Arbiter 108 features part of the Beethoven Piano Concerto No. 3 and the Shostakovich Concerto No. 1, and it includes Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition, which also appears in the RCA Victor set, as well as on VAI 1048, the last from an Australian recital of July 21, 1953.
In 2004, a number of broadcast recordings made during William Kapell's last Australian tour were returned to his family.[25] RCA Victor issued these recordings in 2008 under the title Kapell Rediscovered. Included are several previously unknown performances of "God Save the Queen", Debussy's Suite bergamasque, Chopin's Barcarolle, Op. 60, and Scherzo No. 1 in B minor, Op. 20, and Prokofiev's Sonata No. 7, Op. 83.[26] In 2013, RCA issued a new 11 CD set of Kapell's complete recordings, including the broadcast recordings from the final Australian tour.
References
[edit]Notes
- ^ Masters, Richard (2023). Encyclopedia of American classical pianists: 1800s to the present. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-5381-7146-2.
- ^ "WILLIAM KAPELL'S PIANO BENCHMARK". Washington Post. January 9, 2024. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
America's first great pianist has finally been accorded the tribute he deserves.
- ^ Wakin, Daniel J. (November 10, 2004). "The Found Treasures of a Great Pianist". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
When the 31-year-old pianist William Kapell, one of the last century's great geniuses of the keyboard, was killed in a plane crash in 1953, he was returning from a concert tour in Australia.
- ^ Kimmelman, Michael (March 24, 2005). "The Undefeated". The New York Review of Books. Vol. 52, no. 5. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
Was there any greater American pianist born during the last century than Kapell? Perhaps not. Certainly he was the most famous American-born player before Van Cliburn.
- ^ Downes 2013, p. 15.
- ^ William Kapell Archived 2008-07-04 at the Wayback Machine at Naxos.com
- ^ a b c d Tim Page, "William Kapell's Piano Benchmark", The Washington Post, September 27, 1998 (at williamkapell.com).
- ^ Downes 2013, p. 18.
- ^ "William Kapell Edition Vol 4 – Khachaturian, Prokofiev—Notes & Reviews". ArkivMusic. Archived from the original on August 23, 2018.
- ^ Jean-Pierre Thiollet, 88 notes pour piano solo, "Solo nec plus ultra", Neva Editions, 2015, p. 51. ISBN 978 2 3505 5192 0.
- ^ Downes 2013, 33.
- ^ Downes 2013, 115–117.
- ^ Jed Distler. "Review: William Kapell Rediscovered: The Australian Broadcasts". Classics Today. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
- ^ McBeath, John (February 16, 2013). "Last notes of a prodigy". The Australian.
- ^ Downes 2013, p. 115.
- ^ "19 Killed In B.C.P.A. Crash in U.S.A." The Sydney Morning Herald. Australian Associated Press. October 31, 1953. p. 1. Retrieved October 8, 2023 – via Trove.
- ^ "Kapell: Truly American Craftsman Of Music", obituary in The Sydney Morning Herald, October 31, 1953, p. 2. Retrieved 2012-08-17
- ^ Downes 2013, p. 16.
- ^ W. L. Hoffmann, "Lest we forget Isaac Stern", The Canberra Times, October 24, 2001.
- ^ Dubal, David. Reflections from the Keyboard, ISBN 0-8256-7211-2
- ^ "$7M Suit Filed Against Three Airlines". News in Brief. The Times. No. 54372. London. January 30, 1959. col C, p. 10.
- ^ "$924,396 for Pianist's Widow". News. The Times. No. 55923. London. January 31, 1964. col G, p. 12.
- ^ Edward Ranzal (June 10, 1965). "Kapell's kin lose $924,396 award; Appeals Court Throws Out Damages for 1953 Death of Pianist in DC-6 Crash". The New York Times. (subscription required)
- ^ "Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center at Maryland – The William Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival – About the Competition and Festival". Archived from the original on June 23, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2012.
- ^ Daniel J. Wakin (November 10, 2004). "The Found Treasures of a Great Pianist". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2023.
- ^ "Last Recordings of American Pianist William Kapell". Sony BMG. Retrieved March 20, 2008.
Sources
- Downes, Stephen (2013). A Lasting Record. HarperCollins Australia. ISBN 9780730499909.
External links
[edit]- William Kapell Rediscovered at williamkapell.com
- "The Undefeated" review of William Kapell Edition by Michael Kimmelman, The New York Review of Books, March 24, 2005 (subscription required)
- The William Kapell International Piano Competition and Festival Archived 2013-02-07 at the Wayback Machine
- Video of William Kapell recital (10:19) on YouTube, Scarlatti; Chopin's Nocturne No. 2, Op. 55; "Gato" arranged by Emilio A. Napolitano
- William Kapell Remembered, Part 1 (8:26) on YouTube
- William Kapell Remembered, Part 2 (8:27) on YouTube
- William Kapell Remembered, Part 2 (8:26) on YouTube
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