RAG MusicPiano
A web magazine to help you enjoy the piano even more

Famous pianists you should listen to at least once. Recommended pianists.

Introducing famous pianists you should listen to at least once!

Even people who aren’t into instrumentals often find themselves listening to piano pieces, right?

Unlike the guitar, the piano isn’t an instrument you run through effects, so its tonal individuality can be hard to distinguish—but that also means it appeals to a wide audience.

Here, we’re introducing professional pianists who command the piano as if it were part of their own bodies!

We’ll feature not only international pianists but also Japanese pianists.

The explanations are quite detailed, so even those who regularly listen to classical music should enjoy this!

Now, please sit back and enjoy!

Famous pianists you should listen to at least once. Recommended pianists (91–100)

Buen Camino: A Fantasy of Lala Wan and MaionCecile Licad

Cecile Licad is a pianist from Manila, Philippines.

She was born on May 11, 1961, and is an active pianist.

After graduating from the Curtis Institute of Music, she appears to have begun her career as a pianist, but unfortunately there is little detailed information available about her in Japan.

She is beloved for her performances of classical repertoire.

Haydn: Piano Sonata No. 59Emanuel Ax

[Emanuel Ax] Haydn: Piano Sonata in C, No.60, Hob.XVI/50
Haydn: Piano Sonata No. 59Emanuel Ax

Emanuel Ax is an American pianist.

He is of Polish Jewish descent, and his wife, Yoko Nozaki, is also a pianist.

Born in Ukraine, he began studying piano at age six under his father’s guidance.

At eight, he moved with his family to Warsaw, and two years later they immigrated to Canada.

In 1961, he moved to New York, where his career as a pianist began.

He still resides in New York.

Mozart: Piano Concerto No. 23Christoph Eschenbach

Christoph Eschenbach is a German pianist and conductor born in 1940.

He was initially known internationally as an outstanding pianist.

It is said that Mozart worked on this piece with concentrated, meticulous care, and because dazzling passages appear incessantly, there was no room to insert the improvisational techniques he usually favored.

Haydn: Piano Sonata Hob. (Hoboken number) XVI:49, First MovementElena Ulyanova

Elena Ulyanova is a pianist from Saky, Crimea, Ukraine.

The piece she performs is the first movement from Piano Sonata Hob.

XVI:49 by the Austrian composer Franz Joseph Haydn, a representative of the Classical period.

Bach: Italian Concerto, Second MovementMariangela Vacatello

J.S.Bach: Concerto Italiano BWV 971- Andante in re min. – Mariangela Vacatello
Bach: Italian Concerto, Second MovementMariangela Vacatello

Mariangela Vacatello is a pianist from Naples, Italy.

The piece performed is the second movement from Johann Sebastian Bach’s Italian Concerto, BWV 971.

The Andante in D minor (second movement) evokes a sense of nostalgia with its wistful melody.