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News

2009
Guy Livingston - NPR Interview about One Minute More

2007
Guy Livingston - Carte Balnche à Guy Livingston with Ensemble Aleph in Paris
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston and Antheil concerto: a fine artist
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston - Breathes New Life into Antheil

2006
Guy Livingston - Dada at the Movies in Eindhoven
Guy Livingston - The Other Side of George Antheil, Reviewed in Sequenza 21 by N. Bibb
Guy Livingston - All Music Guide, September 20th by David N, Lewis
Guy Livingston - New Music Box

2005
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston at the Cluny Festival
Guy Livingston - Germany Tour, May 10 to 13th, 2005
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston and the Nothing Doing Band
Guy Livingston - Darius Mihaud's Le Boeuf sur le Toit -
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston and the Why Not Duo in CapeTown Vineyard concert

2004
Guy Livingston - Guy Livingston's
Guy Livingston - "An outstanding release and an important one"
Guy Livingston - Pianist Guy Livingston at Radio France
artist_pict Guy Livingston
piano

Artist page
Guy Livingston's
December 31, 2004, 9:00 pm

Guy Livingstone Date
2003 66:39Label
Wergo[6661]Genre
Keyboard
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Review by David Lewis

Pianist Guy Livingston has brought his considerable talents to bear on the "bad boy of music" in the Wergo disc George Antheil: The Lost Sonatas. Livingston attempts to reconcile George Antheil's late "populist" music with the clangorous early piano compositions that have become Antheil's calling card to posterity. In the process Livingston uncovers a host of masterworks from both periods, proving that in his piano music, Antheil was neither a publicity hound, a "fake" futurist, nor a slavish imitator of mid-century trends hoping to graze from the same gravy train as Copland.

In a sense, of the three late piano sonatas heard here, Sonata No. 4 has never been "lost" so much as terribly neglected; it was duly published by Weintraub back in 1951 and has been recorded a few times. However, the others, save Sonata Sauvage, have not been played in five or more decades. The Piano Sonata No. 5, which opens the disc, is a real gem, particularly the concluding Allegro, which seems to bring boogie-woogie stylings into the orbit of Prokofiev. The melting lyricism of the Adagio movement of the Sonata No. 3 may surprise some listeners, but it is not so astonishing if you understand the milieu of the short second movement of Antheil's "Airplane" Sonata.

George Antheil: The Lost Sonatas' great strength is not so much in that it introduces so many works never heard before as it shows us how much Antheil's later music is like his earlier music. Hopefully this will bury for all time the criticism of "stylistic inconsistency" that has dogged Antheil in posterity and has contributed to his neglect. Wergo's recording is perfect, picking up the piano's full range, from intimacy in the Sonata No. 3 to the blistering loudness of the Sonata Sauvage, reproducing it all faithfully. The task of playing Antheil's piano music well is in itself quite a feat. It requires the stamina and agility of a boxer tempered with the sensitivity of a poet and a mathematician's sense of logic. Livingston is the champion on all counts, and this is the best compact disc of George Antheil's piano music ever.


All Music Guide