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Neue Zurcher Zeitung (New Zurich Newspaper, Zurich, Switzerland)
"He is one of those geniuses that come along once in twenty years. He has immense energy and intensity that is almost supernatural."
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau (Berlin)
"...that he has worked out a stupendous technique, is beyond doubt."
Alicia de Larrocha (Barcelona)
"...finds his performance a magnificent one!"
Stanislaw Skrowaczewski ( Minnesota, U.S.A.)
"...so many fine achievements and excellent performance"
Kurier (Vienna, Austria)
Concert in the Musikverein:
"The pianist Ruei-Bin Chen gave proof that he merits the many prizes he has already won. He
performed Ravel's "Gaspard de la Nuit," first delicately, then swelling
in mood and very securely throughout, completely engrossed in his act."
Wiener Zeitung (Vienna, Austria)
Headline: "Climax of the Chopin Festival"
"Chen
performed the pieces with technical brilliance and a surprisingly high
degree of emotional penetration for such a young musician . . . "Trois
Mouvements de Petrouschka" by Stravinsky, with the rhythmical and
technical difficulties, was mastered in sovereign fashion."
The Boston Globe ( U.S.A )
Headline: "The power piano of Ruei-Bin Chen"
"He
plays with the white-hot energy, steel-fingered, power and athletic
virtuosity . . . has impetuosity and undeniably impressive technique .
. . Chen showed that he can play with delicacy and imagination."
Salzburger Nachrichten (Salzburg, Austria)
". . .
A pianist's refinement of touch can be anticipated already from the
opening bars of "Ondine" from "Gaspard de la Nuit" by Ravel and
Ruei-Bin Chen was successful in his rendering of the triple pianissimo
of the introductory chords constantly changing in tone colour, which in
the beginning overlie the melody line in the bottom part; he presented
the piece, which, in terms of sound language, is evocative of Debussy,
with intensity in sustaining and increasing the tension: he painted "Le Gibet" in sombre colours and demonstrated all nuances of a pianist's art of touch.
"Scarbo",
the last part of Ravel's "Trois Poemes" after the poems by Aloysius
Bertrand calls for the pianist's highest technical skills. Ruei-Bin
Chen, however, kept control, lent the work an inner stability and
mastered the expressiveness of the piece by constantly changing the
dynamics of his performance . . ."
South China Morning Post (HK)
". . . one could never doubt Mr Chen's brilliance, and his instinctive feel for the music."
DAY&NIGHT,
He
is good; that was quite obvious. The audience couldn't take their ears
off him, so to speak. He's got technique, control, good tone and that
elusive quality called "feel".
Sundaystar,
Headline: "Markings of a master pianist"
"In the appasionata Sonata, Ruei-Bin demonstrated his Horowitzian finger power. Indeed,
it is not Ruei-Bin's repeated display of virtuoso skills but rather two
quiet passages (both in the Chopin works), which their reviewer would
want to remember his recital by."
Waschauer Chopin Blatter (Vienna, Austria)
"By
performing the Chopin Sonata in B-minor (op. 35) the sixteen year old
Ruei-Bin Chen from Taiwan made a name for himself as an exceptional
talent. Chopin's mature work had a fresh appeal, not the stale and perfunctory renderings one hears so often. The Taiwanese allowed the music to unfold flourish in a rarely noted fashion. Particularly
the rather trite funeral march arrested the audience's attention in
virtually breathless thrill, and at the conclusion of the last
movement, it reaped a wave of thundering applause.
Wiener Chopin Blatter (Austria)
"The
degree of the young Chinese's mastery of piano technique is
exceptional, yet all the more prominently he brought out the young
Liszt's capacity for creative, artistic expression.
Min Sheng News (Taiwan)
"In
the Third Piano Concerto by Rachmaninoff, Chen brought out his unique
talent -- the delicacy and swift precision of his fingers. Even
the most complex passages did not unsettle him as the agility of his
wrists allowed him facility in playing strong and fast octaves. Towards the end of the piece he put in much force from his upper body and arms to produce the enormous thunder of the music. Rachmaninoff's
charm and passionate temper was poignantly expressed through Chen's
complete emotional involvement and resolute commitment to his
performance and carried the mesmerized audience's fascination to a
climax."
Polytika (Poland):
"He succeeded brilliantly in uniting the vigorous themes and the scurrying runs and thrills into a polished whole.
Et B News (Austria):
". . . Ruei-Bin Chen who performed his difficult and extensive program with stupendous technical brilliance.
With Stravinsky's "Trois Mouvements de Petrouschka" he proved to be a true wizard of the keys wielding a thunderous stroke.
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