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May 24, 2008
TT: After the good die young
When William Kapell died in a plane crash in 1953 at the age of 31, he was well on the way to becoming an international classical-music celebrity. Instead he was forgotten. It wasn't until his complete commercial recordings were reissued in a nine-CD box set in 1998 that a new generation of listeners discovered Kapell, and even now the fact that he was America's greatest native-born pianist is not yet widely recognized.
Earlier this month RCA released a two-CD set of live recordings made by Kapell in Australia a few weeks before he died. The release of Kapell Rediscovered is the occasion for my "Sightings" column in today's Wall Street Journal, in which I reflect on Kapell's brief but extraordinary career--and on the reasons why he is so poorly remembered now.
To find out why William Kapell vanished into the cultural memory hole, pick up a copy of Saturday's Journal, turn to the "Weekend Journal" section, and see what I have to say in "Sightings." Or read the whole thing here.
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The only known video footage of Kapell's playing is a kinescope of a TV appearance he made on Omnibus in 1953. Here it is:
Posted May 24, 2008 12:00 AM
