Moment exotique

Moment exotique, also known as Danse excentrique, is a short concert piece for solo piano by the Russian pianist Vladimir Horowitz.[1]

Vladimir Horowitz seated at the piano.

Background

The piece is thought to have been composed in either 1920 or 1921,[1] before Horowitz left Russia. He originally composed the piece for his brother's 18th birthday party.[2] Horowitz first recorded the piece on a piano roll for Welte-Mignon in 1926[3] and later went on to record it for RCA Records in 1930, this time as an audio recording.

Analysis

The piece is written in a cakewalk style. It is a colorful and cheery piece lasting around two and a half minutes.[1]

gollark: The best (for power output) reaction is D-T, it seems.
gollark: (note: may not actually cancel out)
gollark: You can make the bath contain plasma *and* neutron fluid *and* liquid helium, so it cancels out.
gollark: Idea: fusion plasma bathing experience.
gollark: I just run all my reactors so that they need no manual intervention at all.

References

  1. "Moment Exotique". Allmusic. Retrieved 2010-02-18.
  2. Dubal, David (1991). Evenings With Horowitz - A Personal Portrait. Amadeus Press. p. 180. ISBN 1-57467-086-7.
  3. The Welte Mignon Mystery Vol. XI
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