David Dubal

David Dubal (born Cleveland, Ohio) is an American pianist, teacher, author, lecturer, broadcaster, and painter.[1]

Musician and Painter

Dubal has given piano recitals and master classes worldwide, and has also judged international piano competitions (to include the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition). He recorded several albums jointly with pianist Stanley Waldoff for the Musical Heritage Society label, and four compact discs of these recordings have been released on the ArkivCD label.[2][3][4] His album of Aram Khachaturian solo piano works[5] has never been given a compact disc release, although it has been archived at YouTube.[6] Dubal appeared in the 2013 Dutch film Nostalgia: The Music of Wim Statius Muller, commenting on the musical compositions of Wim Statius Muller, who was his teacher at Ohio State University.[7] Dubal has taught at the Juilliard School since 1983,[8] and taught at the Manhattan School of Music from 1994 until 2015. His strikingly vivid drawings and paintings have garnered attention and praise for the impressions they have made.[9][10]

Author

Dubal is the author of highly acclaimed books that include The Art of the Piano, Evenings with Horowitz, Conversations with Menuhin, Reflections from the Keyboard, Conversations with Joao Carlos Martins, The Essential Canon of Classical Music (an encyclopedic guide to the prominent composers of the Western canon), and Remembering Horowitz (with 125 essays by accomplished pianists and a disc of Vladimir Horowitz and Dubal in conversation).[11] He also wrote and hosted The Golden Age of the Piano, an Emmy Award winning documentary produced by Peter Rosen.[12] Several of his articles on music have appeared in The Wall Street Journal,[13][14][15][16] and his piece "Let's Tickle the Ivories," published in The New Criterion, generated much comment.[17]

Lecturer

Dubal has lectured numerous times at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art since the 1980s. Some of his most recent lectures there were two given in 2009 on Felix Mendelssohn,[18] a 200th birthday lecture on Frederic Chopin and Robert Schumann in 2010,[19] three lectures in 2011 on Russian Romantic composers,[20] and four lectures in 2012 on La Belle Époque.[21] He gave three lectures (on Chopin, Liszt, and the history of the piano) at the 1993 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. Dubal has given interviews on the subjects of the great pianists, music history and tradition, and the century of social change to the Snapshots Music and Arts Foundation, and these interviews are available to hear at their website.[22][23][24]

Current & Recent Broadcasting Activity

Dubal is the host of The Piano Matters, a program of comparative piano performances that can be heard on WWFM and other U.S. radio stations.[25] He also hosts Reflections from the Keyboard, a weekly exploration of piano recordings, heard on WQXR-FM.

In the late 1990s, Dubal hosted a series of radio programs titled The American Century, focusing on musical works of the 20th century written by U.S. composers. Many episodes of this series have been archived at YouTube.[26]

Music Director of WNCN-FM

From 1971-1994, Dubal served as Music Director of storied New York City classical music radio station WNCN-FM.[27] In 1976, he hosted a regular program of comparative performances titled A Musical Offering, and more than a hundred of these programs have been archived at YouTube.[28] In 1980, his series of interviews with Vladimir Horowitz, Conversations with Horowitz, was awarded a George Foster Peabody Award.[29] In the early 1980s, Dubal interviewed Claudio Arrau for a series titled Conversations with Arrau, consisting of six programs on the great pianist's life and career.[30] In 1985, he interviewed Yehudi Menuhin at the WNCN-FM studios; much of this conversation was used in the book Conversations with Menuhin.[31] Dubal also hosted a series of WNCN-FM programs titled For the Love of Music, in which he interviewed numerous pianists (including Murray Perahia, Mitsuko Uchida, and Alexis Weissenberg), composers (including John Corigliano, Phillip Ramey, and William Mayer), and other prominent persons in the arts (including Quentin Crisp, Shlomo Mintz, and Wanda Wiłkomirska); more than a hundred of these interviews have also been archived at YouTube.[32]

Honors

Dubal was honored by composer Virgil Thomson with a musical portrait titled "David Dubal: In Flight"; it has been recorded by pianist Jacquelyn Helin[33] and a version orchestrated by Thomson was also recorded.[34] (An analysis of "David Dubal: In Flight" can be found in Anthony Tommasini's book Virgil Thomson's Musical Portraits).[35] In 1986, Dubal was recognized for his work at WNCN-FM with an ASCAP Deems Taylor Award for broadcasting.[36] In 2006, he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Music degree from the State University of New York.[37]

References

  1. "David Dubal Biography". Great Composers. Retrieved 2010-02-21.
  2. Invitation to the Dance (David Dubal & Stanley Waldoff) at ArkivMusic.com
  3. Music of the Romantic Pianist/Composer (2-CD set) (David Dubal & Stanley Waldoff) at ArkivMusic.com
  4. The Piano in America (David Dubal & Stanley Waldoff) at ArkivMusic.com
  5. 'Aram Khachaturian -- David Dubal -- Piano Music' info at Discogs.com
  6. Khachaturian Piano Music Recital by David Dubal, archived at YouTube.com
  7. Nostalgia: The Music of Wim Statius Muller (2013) at imdb.com
  8. The Juilliard School – Music Division Faculty – David Dubal
  9. 'The Other Side of David Dubal' from Juilliard Journal (2008)
  10. "Poignant Reflections" at notesontheroad.com
  11. David Dubal's page at Amazon.com
  12. 38th Annual New York Emmy Awards
  13. Dubal on Gottschalk in Wall Street Journal (2013)
  14. Dubal on Liszt in Wall Street Journal (2012)
  15. Dubal on Chopin's 'Preludes' in Wall Street Journal (2010)
  16. Dubal on Debussy in Wall Street Journal (2012)
  17. Comments on "Let's Tickle the Ivories" at NewCriterion.com
  18. Dubal on Mendelssohn at the Met, 2009
  19. Dubal on Chopin & Schumann at the Met, 2010
  20. Dubal on "Russian Romantics" at the Met, 2011
  21. Dubal on "La Belle Epoque" at the Met, 2012
  22. David Dubal on history and tradition at SnapshotsFoundation.com
  23. David Dubal on the great pianists at SnapshotsFoundation.com
  24. David Dubal on the century of social change at SnapshotsFoundation.com
  25. Archived episodes of The Piano Matters at WWFM.org
  26. Archived episodes of The American Century at YouTube.com
  27. Matt@WNCN.org. "WNCN New York 104.3 FM. Classical Radio at its Best 1956-1993". WNCN. Retrieved November 13, 2014.
  28. Episodes of A Musical Offering archived at YouTube.com
  29. "Institutional Award: WNCN Radio for Overall Performance as Exemplified by 'Conversations with Horowitz'” (peabodyawards.com)
  30. Conversations with Arrau archived at YouTube
  31. Feb. 13, 1985 interview with Yehudi Menuhin archived at YouTube.com
  32. For the Love of Music interviews archived at YouTube.com
  33. "David Dubal: In Flight" recorded by Jacquelyn Helin
  34. "David Dubal: In Flight", Oshkosh S.O., Henri B. Pensis, conductor
  35. Virgil Thomson's Musical Portraits by Anthony Tommasini at Amazon.com
  36. 19th Annual ASCAP Deems Taylor Award Recipients
  37. State University of New York (SUNY) Honorary Degrees

External links

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