Career[edit]
Revenaugh was born in Louisville, Kentucky. He made his debut as a pianist at the age of 14 playing Beethoven's First Piano Concerto with the Louisville Orchestra.
He studied with Ferruccio Busoni's pupil Egon Petri from 1951 until Petri's death in 1962. In 1959 he graduated from Florida State University, where he studied with Ernst von Dohnányi and Lewis Pankaskie. He later founded the Busoni Society with Rudolph Ganz and Gunnar Johansen, and has amassed a large and important collection of Busoni and Petri materials.
In 1973 Revenaugh became the first General Director of the Institute For Advanced Music Study in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, a full scholarship international programme with faculty which included Zino Francescatti, Gregor Piatigorsky, Ib Lanzky-Otto and Rudolf Kempe.
Daniell Revenaugh invented and patented a lower lid for the grand piano, which projects the sound more effectively. It has been used in concert by pianists such as Martha Argerich, Peter Serkin, André Watts,[1] Radu Lupu and Alexander Toradze. He also patented a muting device for grand pianos, which protects downstairs neighbors.
Revenaugh created the Electric Symphony Orchestra.[2][3] In the 1980s he created the Classical Cabaret, which performed solo and chamber works to the accompaniment of jugglers, paddleballs, yo-yos, Indian clubs and fire eaters. He was involved in a project to convert opera composer Carlisle Floyd's former home in Tallahassee, Florida into an artist's residence.
He had four children and three grandchildren and had homes in Berkeley, California; Tallahassee, Florida; and Lausanne, Switzerland. Revenaugh owned many pianos, among which was the 1840 Érard upon which Franz Liszt played the first solo piano recital. The Erard is autographed by Liszt himself. In 2008 Revenaugh made a DVD of Carlisle Floyd's Piano Sonata, which included an hour of coaching by Floyd himself.