Bereavement: Italian pianist Pollini dies at the age of 82

Bereavement
Italian pianist Pollini dies at 82

The pianist Maurizio Pollini at the Echo-Klassik award ceremony in 2017. Photo

© picture alliance / Axel Heimken/dpa

Critics described his style as unsentimental and intense, perfect and unique, clear and brilliant: the pianist and conductor Pollini has died.

The internationally renowned Italian pianist and conductor Maurizio Pollini has died at the age of 82. This was announced by the opera house in his hometown of Milan, the Teatro alla Scala. La Scala mourns the loss of “one of the great musicians of our time.” Pollini also visited Germany a lot. His repertoire included the great classical piano works, but also a lot of contemporary music.

The architect’s son had already made his breakthrough at the age of 18 when he lived in 1960 Warsaw won the coveted Chopin Competition. The head of the jury at the time, the piano legend Arthur Rubinstein, praised: “This boy plays the piano better than any of us.” He got further polish from Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli, another grandmaster. The Milanese built a world career on this foundation.

Critics described his style as unsentimental and intense, perfect and unique, clear and brilliant. Piano concertos, sonatas and ballads by Frédéric Chopin, Franz Schubert and Ludwig van Beethoven, solo or in an orchestra – this was one side of Pollini. Over the decades he also expanded his program to include contemporary works: Luigi Nono, Karlheinz Stockhausen and Pierre Boulez.

Pollini also played in sports centers and factory halls. In 1976 he was even named the “best pianist in the world” in a critics’ survey. At the Scala, his home stage, he appeared no fewer than 168 times over the decades. He gave his last concert there in February last year. Anyone who knows how to appreciate a Beethoven quartet is probably also able to follow contemporary music – according to this motto, Pollini put together many of his concert evenings.

Even if some critics sometimes lacked expressiveness and tension, Pollini always set new accents. He has also received numerous awards over the decades, including the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize and the Echo Klassik for his life’s work.

dpa

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