giving a concert for
Emperor Franz Joseph I on a Bösendorfer piano Among the earliest artists to be associated with Bösendorfer was
Franz Liszt, who at least once opined that Bösendorfer and
Bechstein pianos were the only instruments capable of withstanding his tremendously powerful playing. The renowned twentieth-century American composer–conductor
Leonard Bernstein has also performed on a Bösendorfer. Another great pianist who championed Bösendorfer pianos was
Wilhelm Backhaus. In his memoirs,
Arthur Rubinstein recounts having insisted on a Bechstein instead of the hall's Bösendorfer before a recital in Austria. After the performance, the then-head of the Bösendorfer company came backstage to meet this young artist who refused to play a piano highly cherished by his Russian namesake,
Anton Rubinstein; Rubinstein claims he thereafter always sought out Bösendorfers when in Austria. In the late 1970s, following a concert performed in
Vienna, jazz pianist
Oscar Peterson turned to his impresario,
Norman Granz, with the words: "Dammit, Norman, where does this box go? I also gotta have such a thing!" Such was his reaction to playing a Bösendorfer 290. Musician/comedian
Victor Borge also played Bösendorfer pianos. More recent examples of notable artists who have played the Bösendorfer include Russian pianist
Sviatoslav Richter claiming it had a preferable pianissimo sound and control, according to his own interview); Hungarian pianist
András Schiff; Austrian pianist
Alfred Brendel; Italian pianist
Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli; American
free jazz pianist
Cecil Taylor and American singer-songwriter
Tori Amos; German pianist
Wolfgang Rübsam; Austrian pianists
Friedrich Gulda,
Walter Klien and
Paul Badura-Skoda; British pianists
Leon McCawley and
Mark Gasser. Minimalist composer
Charlemagne Palestine chose a nine-foot Bösendorfer as the vehicle on which to perform his 1974 composition
Strumming Music. Released as his first compact disc in 1991, it features in excess of 45 minutes of Palestine forcefully playing two notes in rapid alternation, slowly expanding into clusters, with the sustain pedal depressed throughout. Jazz pianist
Keith Jarrett performed the solo improvisations (his
Köln Concert) at the
Cologne Opera in Cologne, Germany, on 24 January 1975 on a Bösendorfer and became a Steinway & Sons artist in 1981.
Recordings Bösendorfer pianos have appeared on numerous records. Some examples are:
Classical (recordings made with historical Bösendorfer pianos) • Wolfgang Brunner, Michael Schopper. Anton Bruckner.
Piano Works. Label: CPO. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (before 1835). • Christoph Eggner. Anton Bruckner.
Piano Pieces from the Kitzler-Studienbuch. Label: Gramola. • Christian Lambour. Schubert, Ries, Hummel, Kuhlau, Reinecke, Czerny.
Almost Mozart: Fantasies after Mozart. Label: Koch Schwann. Played on pianos by Bösendorfer (1846) and
Broadwood (1812). • Hardy Rittner, Teunis van der Zwart. Johannes Brahms.
Early Piano Works Vol. 2. Label: Dabringhaus und Grimm (MDG). Played on an Ignaz Bösendorfer piano (1849–1850). • Yves Saelens, Jan Vermeulen. Robert Franz.
Lieder. Label: Etcetera Records. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1851). •
Isabelle Faust,
Alexander Melnikov, Teunis van der Zwart. Johannes Brahms.
Horn Trio Op. 40, Violin Sonata Op. 78, Fantasies Op. 116. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1875). • Isabelle Faust, Alexander Melnikov. Albert Dietrich, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms.
Violin Sonatas Op. 100 & 108. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1875). • Alexander Melnikov. Franz Schubert, Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, Igor Stravinsky.
Four Pianos, Four Pieces. Label: Harmonia Mundi. Played on pianos by Alois Graff (c. 1828–1835), Érard (1837), Bösendorfer (c. 1875) and Steinway (2014). • Italian Piano Quartet. Johannes Brahms.
Piano Quartets Op. 25, 26 & 60. Label: Symphonia. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1880). • Maria Milstein,
Jozef De Beenhouwer. Johannes Brahms.
Hauskonzert bei Brahms - Mürzzuschlag, 23. August 1885. Label: Brahms Museum Mürzzuschlag. Played on a Ludwig Bösendorfer piano (1882). • Sirkka-Liisa Kaakinen,
Tuija Hakkila. Brahms.
Sonatas for Violin and Piano. Label: Ondine. Played on pianos by Bösendorfer (1892) and
J. B. Streicher (1864). • Simona Eisinger, Zuzana Ferjenčíková. Sergei Rachmaninoff, Robert Schumann, Johannes Brahms, Richard Strauss.
Seelenverwandt. Label: Schwechtenstein-Records. Played on pianos by J. B. Streicher (1847),
Friedrich Ehrbar (1878) and Ludwig Bösendorfer (1893). •
Simona Saturova, Markéta Cukrová, Vojtěch Spurný. Antonín Dvořák.
Moravian Duets. Label: Supraphon. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1879). •
Radoslav Kvapil. Antonín Dvořák.
Dvořák Piano Works. Label: Alto. Played on the composer's own Bösendorfer piano (1879). • Radoslav Kvapil. Antonín Dvořák.
Dvořák Piano Works II. Label: Alto. Played on the composer's own Bösendorfer piano (1879). • Jan Michiels. Antonín Dvořák.
Suite Op. 98, Poetische Stimmungsbilder Op. 85, Humoresken Op. 101. Label: Eufoda. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1884). • Jan Michiels. Johannes Brahms.
Klavierstucke & Intermezzi Opus 116-119. Label: Eufoda. Played on a Bösendorfer piano (1884). • Sofja Gülbadamova. Ernst von Dohnányi.
Suite in the olden style, Pastorale, Variations on a Hungarian folk song. Label: Capriccio. Played on the composer's own Bösendorfer piano (1910).
Classical (recordings made with modern Bösendorfer pianos) •
Malcolm Frager recorded ten compositions by
Frédéric Chopin on a Bösendorfer Imperial 290 piano for the TELARC label on 3 and 4 August 1978. This is one of the earlier, high-quality
digital recordings of the Imperial. Sampling frequency conversion of Telarc's Soundstream digital master to the Compact Disc format was accomplished with the Studer SFC-16 sampling frequency converter. The digital data was not subject to any analog processing, thus preserving the integrity of the original digital master. Originally released as "Malcolm Frager Plays
Chopin", Telarc DG-10040 in 1979. Re-released with "Sonata, Op. 58" added in 1991 on Telarc CD-80280. •
Aldo Ciccolini recorded his second traversal of the piano music of
Erik Satie on a Bösendorfer; his first traversal was on a Steinway. Both are included in French EMI set 50999685824 2 5, offering record listeners an unusual opportunity for direct comparison of the two instruments. •
Peter Hill recorded
Havergal Brian's complete piano music on a Bösendorfer Imperial at the Northern College of Music for Cameo Classics.
John Ogdon highly praised the recordings in his review for Tempo. •
Gerhard Oppitz in 1989 recorded a complete traversal of the solo piano music of
Johannes Brahms on an Imperial Grand. •
Awadagin Pratt more recently recorded
Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition, his own transcription of
Bach's
Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor, BWV 582, and
Brahms's
Variations and Fugue on a Theme by Handel on an Imperial Grand. •
Sviatoslav Richter recorded Bach's
Well-Tempered Clavier on a Bösendorfer at Salzburg in two settings of 1972 and 1973. •
Maria Tipo played Mozart's
Piano Concerto No. 21 in C major K 467 on a Bösendorfer with Mozarteum Orchestra Salzburg in 1989. •
Carol Rosenberger recorded music of Liszt,
Griffes,
Ravel, and
Debussy and
Beethoven's
Appassionata and
op. 111 sonatas on an Imperial Concert Grand. •
Moritz Rosenthal played a Bösendorfer for his celebrated series of recordings for
His Master's Voice. •
Terry Riley's 1986
minimalist piano piece written in
Just intonation,
The Harp of New Albion, was recorded on a Bösendorfer Imperial grand piano, specially tuned for Riley himself. •
Robert Silverman committed a complete Beethoven sonata cycle to computer hard drive on a Bösendorfer 290SE reproducing piano. John Atkinson of
Stereophile magazine then recorded a similar piano at the Maestro Foundation recital hall in Santa Monica, California replaying the files; the resulting CDs were issued as a 10-disc set. •
Robert Ekelund – Two albums of piano pieces performed by economist and pianist Robert Ekelund, performed on the Murray N. and JoAnn B. Rothbard Bösendorfer Imperial Concert Grand Piano in the Mises Institute's Conservatory. Ekelund also performed Brahms Rhapsody Op. 79, No. 2; J.S. Bach, Gigue, French Suite No. 5 (G-major). •
Valentina Lisitsa Chopin's 24 Études D.V.D. track. Op. 10 and Op. 25 Études. •
Igor Stravinsky's
Le Sacre du Printemps,
The Firebird and
Petrushka played by
Dag Achatz and
Roland Pöntinen on
BIS Records was played on a
Bosendorfer Model 275 •
Kimiko Douglass-Ishizaka has recorded
J. S. Bach's
Goldberg Variations for public domain release on the Internet by the
Open Goldberg Variations project, an initiative sponsored in part by Bösendorfer. She played a C290 Imperial fitted with the CEUS system. Accompanying the recording—offered in
MP3,
FLAC, and 24-bit 44 K
WAV formats—is a freshly made copy of the full score. Ishizaka also recorded Bach's
The Well-Tempered Clavier on a Bösendorfer 280. •
Costantino Catena has recorded on new Bösendorfer VC280 the CD "Dedications—
Schumann-
Liszt / Costantino Catena plays the new Bösendorfer 280VC" for Camerata Tokyo •
Zoltán Kocsis recorded on Bösendorfer, together with conductor Ivan Fischer and the Budapest Festival Orchestra, the complete work for piano and orchestra by Bela Bartok for Philips. •
Huang Tiange recorded on his Bösendorfer 225 Carl Czerny Op. 599 Complete in 2019. •
Stéphane Ginsburgh recorded two works (quartet for piano; for four) of composer David Toub on his Bösendorfer 225 for the 2016 album Ataraxia.
Popular •
Bradley Joseph in his album
Rapture. •
Steely Dan on the 1975 album
Katy Lied. • According to composer
Jim Steinman,
Roy Bittan played a Bösendorfer on the
Meat Loaf album
Bat Out of Hell in 1977, which was a deviation from Steinman's preference for Yamaha pianos. • Singer/songwriter
Tori Amos has recorded and toured exclusively with Bösendorfers since 1993. She has been endorsing Bösendorfer since 1994. •
Keith Jarrett in
The Köln Concert. •
Matthew Bellamy of the rock band
Muse has used a Bösendorfer. == In popular culture ==