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Abbey Simon |
| An Appreciation |
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May 2009 |

I first saw the name Abbey Simon on the
cover of a vinyl recording of Ravel's
Gaspard de la Nuit. That was nearly thirty
years ago. I was living in a loft on skid
row in downtown Los Angeles, spending my
days setting type and my evenings painting
and drawing. My stereo consisted of an
Acoustic Research XA turntable that I
modified to take an Infinity Black Widow
tone arm, an NAD 1020 preamp, a JBL SA600
power amp and KEF 101 loudspeakers. There
were no such things as audiophile cables,
let alone audiophile power cords. Listening
to music in that loft was a competition with
car horns, drunken brawls, smashing beer
bottles and loud mariachi music from two or
three juke boxes, as well as live from a bar
underneath my studio. Twenty one hundred
square feet with fourteen foot ceilings and
a skylight made it ideal for a painter. For
an audiophile, it was just shy of
impossible.
I practically wore out that record, which my
girlfriend bought at Good Will for less than
a dollar. I got to know Gaspard very well.
And I came to appreciate Abbey Simon's
playing, preferring his measured and orderly
precision to Martha Argerich's fiery
performance that I'd bought at Tower Records
for a lot more than a dollar. It would be
many years before I switched to compact
disks and loaded up on a number of Mr
Simon's recordings of Chopin and Ravel and
Schumann on the VOX label.
It was on an evening only a few years later,
however, that I drove with my girlfriend to
a college auditorium in the Pacific
Palisades to hear Abbey Simon. I remember
being impressed at the physical economy of
his playing. I had expected that such
dynamic pianism would require a certain
flamboyance of motion and gesture. None of
it. Which only served to make Mr Simon's
technique more impressive. We are almost all
of us carrying baggage from our past, but
the performing artist is someone who has
continually worked on that baggage, the
knowledge and experience from his past, like
a sculptor constantly reworking the stone
making it more and more perfect. Mr Simon's
decades-old performance in the Palisades was
just another stepping stone for him, but for
those of us in the audience, it was a
privilege, it was an unforgettable
connection with great music and great
pianism.

The other night was blessed for me. The
remarkable capability of the equipment and
wires I've written about, combined with an
unusual openness of mind and heart, provided
several hours of ecstatic Chopin. I had not
listened to Chopin for over a year and it
was a sort of revelation: the Scherzi,
Ballades, Etudes, Waltzes, and especially,
the B-minor piano sonata, all played by
Abbey Simon.
There are performances that convey an
overwhelming sense of rightness, of being
precisely what the composer intended, down
to the smallest pause and grace note. There
is sometimes a match between performer and
music that leave you without a doubt, this
is perfection. All other performances of
Chopin paled in comparison. I never really
understood Mr Simon's preference for the
Baldwin piano until then: it was ideally
voiced for Chopin's music. A Steinway would
have been utterly different, and, I think,
not as effective. (Mr Simon now favors a
Yamaha CFIIIS and has a DS8 Pro Disklavier
at home.) This was the greatest Chopin
playing I'd ever heard. And like a performer
who matures over time, it had taken me half
a lifetime to arrive at such an
appreciation.
It was all I could do to keep from dancing
on the front lawn in the dark and cold rain.
Practical considerations won out. I simply
sat in the living room, smiling. All was
right with the world.
Gratitude. How does one show gratitude for
such an experience?
Mr
Simon is now in his eighties, he's still
concertizing, he's still thrilling
audiences, he's still appreciated by the
cognoscenti. It's one of those things, one
of those disheartening facts of life that
there's room in the spotlight for only a
few. Many, many great artists, painters,
writers, singers, dancers, as well as
musicians, remain under-appreciated. And it
is our loss. If you believe that great art,
great performance, enriches humanity, then
it is our loss.
Over a decade ago Harold Schonberg wrote in
the New York Times, “Mr. Simon has never
been one of the big, publicized headliners,
but his has been a solid, consistent career,
and when he gives a recital - as he will on
Sunday at 8 P.M. in Carnegie Hall - the
audience will be full of professionals
trying to figure out how those infallible
fingers do this or that, how he gets the
kind of color he does, and what he does with
the rhythms to make them so flexible.”

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