From: "Jeffrey E." <jeevacation@gmail.com>
To: "Charlie Albright )„ 5
Subject: Re: Updates from Charlie
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2017 00:38:18 +0000
i will be back in mid jan hope to see you then
On Fri, Dec 15, 2017 at 7:33 PM, Charlie Albright < > wrote:
Dear Mr Epstein,
Hope you're doing wonderfully! I've been busy performing and traveling, and of course learning new pieces
for upcoming concerts...whew!
Some new news has developed that is quite exciting. As you know, improvisation is something that really sets
me apart as a pianist. I can improvise entire new pieces on the spot, and often do at my concerts...sometimes
performing good chunks or entire concerts as an improvisation based on audience notes and whatnot...it really
helps to set me apart as a musician, because while almost anyone from Juilliard can play almost any concerto,
nobody else can do what I can when it comes to improv. :) (Here's a link of a whole sonata I made up a couple
months ago at a concert: https://www.youtube.comAvatch?v=Zu_-1YAheiQ)
Well, my manager of the past few years is a bit old-fashioned (I think he's about to retire soon), and has never
been one that likes "rocking the boat." I really want to continue pushing ahead with this unique aspect of what
I do, but he's not so enthusiastic, despite audiences going crazy and reviews raving about it (I'll put some
quotes below from recent improv reviews).
Anyway, we amicably agreed that our visions for the future were different, as I want to pursue differentiating
myself through things like improvisation (maybe it's the business-minded side of me?) and he'd prefer me to
just give normal, old-fashioned concerts playing things that anyone can play, which I often feel don't really
connect with `real' people as well...and which prevents me from doing my unique abilities in concerts as much
So, we decided to finish the year and a half of scheduled concerts together and part ways.
This is scary, but I think it's what really needed to happen. I know that what I can do is unique and different...
and I am not a `typical classical pianist.' You know I love playing a Liberace Christmas Medley and Great
Balls of Fire just as much as the Tchaikovsky Concerto.:)
I'm talking to singer Andrea Bocelli's management in London on Monday, and am reaching out to one fellow
at CAMI Music who manages Lang Lang, as they seem to have a better perspective on branding and company
partnerships than my old manager does. If a good match doesn't work out, I'm also looking into young
college graduates in music business/management who are eager to think outside of the box to potentially work
with (my old manager took 20% of all earnings). It's scary but very exciting!
If you know anyone in the entertainment (non-traditional-classical) music industry that might be a good
contact, please let me know, Mr. Epstein! :) I'll keep you posted with all the new developments!
Thank you so much for all of your kindness and continuing support...it is because of people like you that I am
able to really share my unique music with the world.:) Happy Holidays to you and hope to see you very
soon! Here's that Liberace Christmas medley for you, too! (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAD3hTGlp-
Your Friend,
Charlie Albright
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Here are some reviews regarding improvisations I've done:
The Washington Post declared that "Albright is among the most gifted musicians of his generation." It continued
that "An impressive range of differently colored sounds at the keyboard was matched by overwhelming virtuosity"
and that Albright "leapt the most outrageous technical hurdles... with a sense of dangerous self-abandon that was
thrilling to hear. At the same time, musical shape was never sacrificed to showmanship."PiWith regards to
Albright's 2015 tour with Keith Lockhart and the BBC Concert Orchestra, they wrote that Albright "made quite an
impression. He is full of ideas...and has a dazzling natural keyboard affinity. He does not have an overpowering
sonority (fingers more velvet than steel) but a lot of nuance."MAfter an April 24, 2015 concert, the DC Metro
Theater Arts wrote that "Albright was brought back to perform an encore: the audience picked four musical notes
and he improvised a piece using those four notes as a base. To hear the initial sequence of four notes and then
what an elaborate, beautiful piece Albright turned those simple notes into was thrilling. To listen to his own
improvisation, and the emotion he poured into this simple piece...really showed his skill and passion for the piano
and for music."I51
The New York Times praised Albright's "Jaw-dropping technique" and described his playing as "virtuosity with a
distinctive musicality throughout-VI
The Philadelphia Inquirer published that ""Such a display still has novelty, though Albright didn't need it, so
distinctive were his improvisational ideas and overall presence. Though the demure lyricism of "Fur Elise" is
something one associates with music boxes, Albright took off from it in what tumed into a tour of 19th-century
pianism. As clever as he sounds, Albright, in fact, gave the improvisation something I rarely witness in such
settings: a highly personal emotional depth, as if he was expressing his inner self rather than simply exercising his
powers of invention. This concert brought the art of classical-music improvisation to a new level. Of course,
Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3 was bound to show a more filtered version of Albright — it's a tightly written
concerto — though his personality was evident in his way of shaping a phrase with a kind of extravagance that had
showmanship but never felt cheap. With a fresh, clean, crystalline sound, he played with a kind of ease and
smoothness that refuses to airbrush the music, but animates it from within. You simply hear more Beethoven than
usual and with a kind of rhythmic momentum that makes you listen more closely, no matter how familiar the music
has become. And yes, he improvised the first-movement cadenza as Beethoven himself might have."[581
The Boston Musical intelligencer wrote that if Albright "is not indisputably first among equals, he seems to me
unsurpassed, anyway, and on the top tier. I will be surprised to hear another performance at this level very soon. It
was gripping, frankly, both spellbinding and spellbound, quite unlike most such solo recitals I've heard over the
decades"1331 On a separate occasion, they wrote that "Albright has the requisite chops of a competition winner, but
the beauty, sensitivity, and taste of a mature artist. is Schubert was ravishing, imaginative, poetic—full of poignancy
and lyricism. It would seem Albright is a bom Schubert player, whose taste is simply impeccable. His interpretation
sounded spontaneous, but this was also heartfelt, mature playing. Everything had been thought out by a mind
brimming with musical intelligence." In response to his improvised encore, they wrote that "Albright is a master of
improvisation." 1341
The New Yolk Conceit Review wrote that "Albright is a pianist whose name music-lovers will be hearing more and
more. Winner of a slew of awards, most prominently a 2014 Avery Fisher Career Grant, Mr. Albright is now in the
company of musicians who have become household names...Ursula Oppens, Richard Stoltzman, Joshua Bell,
Hillary Hahn, Yuja Wang, and many others who have made their marks. Mr. Albright will undoubtedly lend his own
additional distinction to this already illustrious group. This concert, an evening not to be forgotten. He displayed a
joy in his playing that was utterly infectious. Beethoven, for one, felt new, because as casual as Mr. Albright was in
his stage style and commentary, he was equally intense in his high-powered performances. The finale...took on a
fire of the master's Op. 57 or 111. It was brilliant, precise, and powerful. In fact, throughout the entire evening, he
displayed a joy in playing that was utterly infectious. He disarms jaded concertgoers with an openness and humility
that for some reason we are not prepared to expect. Albright brings a vibrant spirit and limitless range for
performances. He possesses a kind of intellect that doesn't stop growing and will no doubt continue to surprise as
his career progresses. The Etude No. 11 ("Winter Wind"), was, as they say, "as good as it gets" — and so was No.
12 ("The Ocean"). The improvisation was...spectacular, and the spontaneity, even with stylistic similarity to Chopin
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and Rachmaninoff, kept one on the edge of one's seat. The improvisation alone was worth the trip. Bravo — and
encore!" 181
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