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アルトゥール・ルービンシュタイン / フレデリック・ショパン Arthur Rubinstein, piano Originally recorded November 26, 1962 Manhattan Center: New York City, NY (USA) Transferred via Sony tape deck and Remastered in 24-bit, 192 kHz This is a non-commercial video. I do not monetize off of my videos and share them in the context of educational purposes under Fair Use of the Copyright Law of the United States of America and the Copyright Act of Taiwan. All ads if any are from copyright claimers. I am excited to present to you guys my first transfer and remaster of a brand new cassette tape via my Sony cassette tape deck. This is my very first time handling a tape that was never before played as I usually buy used cassette tapes due to my very tight budget. My final uploads for the year of 2025, as it is December 16th when I write this, will be of Arthur Rubinstein's renditions of Chopin's second sonata, his Fantaisie in F minor here, and then the third piano sonata. I hope you guys enjoy these coming videos. - Wayne Bio written by Małgorzata Kosińska of the Polish Music Information Center, partial to fit in the max characters limit here: Widely regarded as one of the greatest pianists. [Arthur Rubinstein] received international acclaim for his performances of the music written by a variety of composers and many regard him as one of the greatest Chopin interpreters of his time. He played in public for eight decades. Born 28 January 1887 in Łódź, died 20 December 1982 in Geneva. Rubinstein took his first piano lessons from Adolf Prechner in Łódź. He first appeared in public at the age of seven, playing music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Franz Schubert and Felix Bartholdy-Mendelssohn in his home town. Having continued his education under Aleksander Różycki in Warsaw, he left for Berlin in 1897 to study piano in the class of Heinrich Barth and theory under Max Bruch and Robert Kahn at the Hochschule für Musik. His debut as a pianist took place on 1st December 1900 in Berlin's Beethoven-Saal; he played Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's Piano concerto in A major and Camille Saint-Saëns' Piano concerto in G minor with Berliner Philharmoniker conducted by Josef Rebícka. The concert was his artistic triumph. In April 1902 he played Saint-Saëns' Concerto at Warsaw Philharmonic directed by Emil Mlynarski. In 1903 Ignacy Jan Paderewski invited him twice for consultation to his villa in Riond Bosson, Switzerland. Upon his move to Paris in 1904, Rubinstein met the impresario Gabriel Astruc and signed a contract with him. This sparked off his great international career, taking him on world-round tours: to the United States in 1906 (New York's Carnegie Hall, Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston), Vienna, Rome, Russia, London (where he played in duo with Pablo Casals and Jacques Thilbaud), Spain, and, on a number of occasions, to Warsaw to give a series of recitals, chamber concerts (played with the violinist Paweł Kochański, the cellist Jan Sebelik and other top musicians) and symphony concerts with the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra under Emil Młynarski, Grzegorz Fitelberg and Henryk Opieński. In 1917-18 he took his first artistic trip to South America, performing in Buenos Aires and, a number of times, in Montevideo, Santiago de Chile and Rio de Janeiro. After Mussolini's anti-Jewish laws were proclaimed in 1938, Rubinstein cancelled his Italian concerts, returned the decorations received from the Italian government and, in October 1939, left with his family for the United States. He became an American citizen in 1946, refusing ever to play in Germany in protest of Nazi crimes. His first post-war visit to Poland took place in 1958 and included concerts in Kraków and Warsaw. In 1960 he was the honorary chair of the jury of the 6th Chopin International Piano Competition in Warsaw, the event which he opened by playing Frederick Chopin's Piano concerto in F minor with the National Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Witold Rowicki. In 1966 he opened the 10th "Warsaw Autumn" International Festival of Contemporary Music, performing Karol Szymanowski's Symphony no. 4 (dedicated to himself) with the National Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Stanisław Wisłocki. In 1975 he took part in a concert marking the 60th anniversary of the Lodz Philharmonic, playing Chopin's Concerto in F minor and Beethoven's Piano concerto in E flat major with the Łódź Philharmonic Orchestra under Henryk Czyż. His last public appearance was in London's Wigmore Hall in May 1976, and his last visit to Poland and to his home town took place in 1979..."