On Dec 15, 2013, at 9:26 AM, Tobiah <[email protected]> wrote:

> I find his tone anemic, his rhythm unmusically erratic, 

I certainly agree about his rhythm (and unless you've heard his recordings from 
around 1930 you don't know the half of it), but he pulled a lot of sound out of 
the guitar.  In 1977, I heard him in the 3,200-seat Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 
a cavernous and not particularly resonant space where the LA Philharmonic 
played until 2003.  He was 84, and obviously having memory or concentration 
problems, so what he played often bore only a passing resemblance to what the 
composer wrote.  But he was quite audible, for better or worse.  Mostly worse.  
I had never heard him live before -- though I was warned what to expect -- and 
as someone with pretensions, however small, of being a guitarist, I was 
embarrassed for my instrument.

Apparently Segovia read my review of that concert in the Los Angeles Times a 
couple days later, and threatened (I don't know to whom) never to return to Los 
Angeles.  "You made a lot of people very happy," someone at the Times told me. 
"He's a hateful old man."

The Times music critic, Martin Bernheimer, was not among those I made happy.  
He'd reviewed Segovia's LA concert the previous year, and wrote what most 
critics were writing about Segovia: the guitar's a joke and there's no good 
music for it, but Segovia's definitely the greatest.  Bernheimer was 
understandably miffed about being made to look foolish by his newest and 
youngest stringer (I was 20 at the time).  That review eventually finished me 
as a Times stringer, a career in which I could have earned hundreds of dollars 
a year.

The subject of how much Segovia helped create the classical guitar's popularity 
and how much he caught the wave at the right time can be discussed endlessly, 
but we should not forget 1) that the classical music establishment looked at 
Segovia, and the guitar, with much condescension, and 2) that he brought some 
disrepute on the instrument by atrocious performances in his later years, when 
someone less egotistical would have realized it was time to retire.  Of course, 
his concerts in the 1930's or 1950's could have been embarrassments  as well; I 
wouldn't know.  

But Segovia was helped a lot by talking dog effect: he was hailed as the 
greatest classical guitarist by lots of people who had no idea there were any 
others.
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