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Cécile Ferrière told me of the time she watched a young Belgian pianist backstage with his coach, huffing and puffing and psyching himself up for the moment of his recital. The coach was feeding her protégé what appeared to be strawberries, which struck Mme. Ferrière as an odd but still rather sympathetic musical preparation—until she looked closer and saw that the strawberries were in reality chunks of raw meat.
You do what you have to do to win, then, and if tiger food works, you go for it. If cosmic justice is not served and you get eliminated, well, then your artistic temperament takes over and perhaps you indulge in some creative protest. A memorable example occurred some years ago when a (mercifully anonymous) pianist was eliminated in the very first round, and didn't think that was fair.
Come opening day of the second round, a sudden, unseemly commotion interrupted the decorous ceremony as the jury trooped in to take places for the first performance. From the back of the hall, the eliminated pianist had turned himself into a human trench mortar, and was lobbing eggs and rotten tomatoes upon the august heads of those who had done him wrong. It was, apparently, the best performance he had ever given, but he was eliminated from the hall all the same. I don't think he had much of a concert hall career after that.
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