Artist's albums
Bach/Busoni, Liszt, Bartok: Piano Concertos
2001 · album
Bartok: Piano Concerto No. 3
1999 · album
Recital Bach, Mozart, Scarlatti & Schubert
1999 · album
Lipatti: Fantasie for Piano, Op. 8
2020 · album
Dino Lipatti - the Columbia recordings 1947-1948
2020 · album
Bach, Mozart & Chopin: Piano Concertos (Live)
2019 · album
Dinu Lipatti (100th Anniversary Edition)
2017 · album
Dinu Lipatti in Zurich
2014 · album
The Final Recital at Besançon Festival
2013 · album
Dinu Lipatti: Cornerstones (1936-1950)
2011 · album
Les Inédits
2011 · album
The Solo Recordings
2011 · album
The Piano Concertos
2008 · album
Chopin: The Complete Recordings
2005 · album
Grieg & Chopin: Piano Concertos
2002 · album
Similar artists
Alfred Cortot
Artist
Alicia de Larrocha
Artist
Maria João Pires
Artist
György Cziffra
Artist
Wilhelm Backhaus
Artist
Edwin Fischer
Artist
Murray Perahia
Artist
Sviatoslav Richter
Artist
Grigory Sokolov
Artist
Biography
Dinu Lipatti is regarded as a legend among 20th century pianists. Alfred Cortot thought Lipatti's playing "perfection," while Clara Haskil once wrote to him, "How I envy your talent. The devil take it. Why must you have so much talent and I so little? Is this justice on earth?" Was it justice that such a talented musician had such a short life? Both Lipatti's parents were musicians: his father was a violinist who had studied with Sarasate and Flesch, his mother a pianist. They, and Lipatti's godfather Georges Enescu, nurtured his talents early. Lipatti attended the Bucharest Conservatory, working with Floria Musicescu from 1928 to 1932. Cortot was one of the judges at the 1934 Vienna International Piano Competition, where Lipatti was awarded second prize. Cortot, who thought Lipatti should have won first prize, resigned from the jury and took Lipatti to Paris to study with him and his assistant Yvonne Lefébure. Lipatti also studied conducting with Charles Münch and composition with Nadia Boulanger and Paul Dukas. Lipatti recitals and concerts in Paris in the late 1930s secured his reputation as a performer. He was known for his self-discipline and thoroughness, taking years to learn a concerto before performing it in public. Those who heard him play assumed that either he had studied the music with a composer's eye or he instinctively knew how to make whatever he played sound so obviously what the composer intended, whether it was Bach or Schubert or Ravel. He returned to Bucharest in 1939 to spend the war years teaching, composing, and writing criticism. Just before the end of the war, he was diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia. His illness was relieved somewhat by new medicines in 1946, enough for him to make recordings for Columbia at his home in Geneva. He took a post teaching at the Geneva Conservatory in 1949 and also recorded the Schumann Piano Concerto with Herbert von Karajan in London. The next year, however, he had to cancel tours of Australia and North and South America and cut back his European performance engagements. Just three months before his death at the age of 33, he gave one last recital in Besançon, fortunately recorded for posterity, his playing still unsurpassed despite his illness.