'Walter Wilhelm Gieseking' (
November 5,
1895 –
October 26,
1956) was a
French-
German pianist and
composer.

Walter Gieseking
Biography
Walter Gieseking is said to have been a natural and intuitive pianist. According to legend, he never practised except in his own mind. He apparently would study the score, imagine playing it, and then perform it flawlessly. His habit of spending hours in total silence as he pored over scores is said to have frustrated his wife greatly.
Born in
Lyon in
France, Gieseking was largely self-taught as a pianist until he studied at the conservatorium in
Hanover. He remained in Germany during
World War II, and also performed sometimes in Nazi-occupied France; these things led to accusations of collaboration with the
Nazi Party. A number of his concerts, particularly in the United States, had to be cancelled because of protests against him. Eventually he was cleared of any wrongdoing by an Allied court. He died in
London during a recording of
Beethoven's Piano Sonata No 15 for
HMV. He had completed the first three movements and, the following day, was due to record the fourth. He died during the night. HMV released the unfinished recording.
Gieseking had a very wide repertoire, ranging from the core works by
Ludwig van Beethoven through to more modern works by the likes of
Ferruccio Busoni,
Paul Hindemith,
Arnold Schoenberg, and the lesser-known Italian
Goffredo Petrassi. He gave the premiere of the
Piano Concerto by
Hans Pfitzner in 1923. Today, though, he is primarily remembered as one of the great interpreters of Mozart,
Frédéric Chopin,
Claude Debussy, and
Maurice Ravel. He recorded the complete piano works of Debussy. His recordings of Debussy's ''
Préludes'', done in
1953 and
1955, have been re-released by
EMI Classics in their "Great Recordings of the Century" collection. Many of his later recordings were made in both monaural and stereo. Music and Arts has released Gieseking's historic 1944 stereo recording of Beethoven's "Emperor" piano concerto. Although some of his recordings - particularly the live ones - are erratic and riddled with wrong notes, when Gieseking was in form he exhibited a superb technical equipment.
[1]
Gieseking was also an amateur
lepidopterist.
References
1. Dean Elder, Pianists at Play, Kahn & Averill, 1989
Bibliography
★ Gieseking, Walter, ''So wurde ich Pianist'' (autobiography), 1963
★ Leimer, Karl and Gieseking, Walter ''The Shortest Way to Pianistic Perfection'', 1932
★ —, ''Rhythmics, Dynamics, Pedal and Other Problems of Piano Playing'', 1938
★ Schonberg, Harold C.,
The Great Pianists, 1963
External links
Youngrok Lee's appreciation pages
★
Biography
★
Recordings & Discography - Walter Gieseking(1) from J.S.Bach to Debussy
★
Recordings & Discography - Walter Gieseking(2) from Dvorák to Trapp
★
BBC artist biography
★