John Browning ranks among the very few truly virtuoso pianists of the post-
Vladimir Horowitz era. A large technique, the ability to draw a broad spectrum of colors and deep reserves of sound from his instrument, and total investment in his work marked him as one of the most important artists of his time. Among his American contemporaries, he alone sustained a career in which there was only a steady enrichment of artistry without detours caused by injury or emotional crisis.
His parents were both musicians: his father a violinist, his mother a pianist. He grew up in Denver and began keyboard studies at five years of age. He recalled the aftermath of a civic concert in which composer/pianist
Béla Bartók and violinist
Joseph Szigeti visited his parents' home and he saw his mother sitting at her piano turning pages for
Bartók. His first public appearance came as soloist with the Denver Symphony at the age of 10. Summer classes with
Josef and Rosina Lhévinne later led to more extended study with Mrs.
Lhévinne at Juilliard School of Music in New York. When the family moved to Los Angeles, further studies with Lee Pattison solidified an increasingly solid technique and introduced him to most of the works that now form his repertory.
Several major awards propelled
Browning to a successful career. In 1954, he won the Steinway Centennial Award, in 1955 he placed first in the esteemed Leventritt Competition, and in 1956 he gained second prize in the Queen Elisabeth International Music Competition in Brussels.
In 1956,
Browning made his debut with the
New York Philharmonic and afterward appeared in nearly every important music center in the world. His debut recording, taped when he was 25, revealed a fully fledged musician, already in complete possession of a polished technique and a probing musicality.
Browning's artistry attracted the attention of composer
Samuel Barber, and in 1962 a new piano concerto was introduced to the public in New York with
Browning performing under the direction of
Erich Leinsdorf. The
Barber Piano Concerto was applauded by critics and audience alike and has, ever since, remained the centerpiece of
Browning's repertory. Two recordings were made, the first with
George Szell and the
Cleveland Orchestra, the second with
Leonard Slatkin directing the
Saint Louis Symphony. The latter was awarded the first of two Grammys won by
Browning (his second was for a collection of
Barber solo piano pieces).
A select repertory, all of it tailored to a pianist of Olympian power and authority, embraced
Mozart,
Beethoven,
Chopin,
Brahms,
Tchaikovsky,
Rachmaninov,
Prokofiev, and
Ravel. Among later 20th century composers,
Barber figured prominently, as did Richard Cumming, who had also written several solo piano works for
Browning.
In addition to appearances with most of the major orchestras in the United States and Europe,
Browning toured Russia on four occasions and was a regular guest at America's most celebrated summer festivals. He was featured at Ravinia, Tanglewood, the Blossom Music Festival, Wolf Trap, and at Lincoln Center's Mostly
Mozart Festival. He performed into the new century, his last appearances being in Washington, DC, in the spring 2002. He died from heart failure at his home in early 2003.