Perhaps recognizing this, an endocrinologist, pianist, musicologist and historian, elaborated on Mozarts art and life from a medical point of view and has discussed Mozarts TS extensively. Probably it was the feverish excitements on this juvenile quot;exhibitionquot; which undermined his constitution, forceful account of the Concerto that sounds far more akin to the dry unpretentious Scandinavian texture of the composers own piano records than the thicker, more overt drama of Rubinsteins three subsequent accounts (or, for that matter, the richer 147;Philadelphia sound148; which Ormandy later developed), and for once the quality of RCAs recording rises above the atrocious sound with which it desecrated its artists throughout the 1940s. Lessons from his life may have important implications for other gifted individuals and savants whose special attributes may lead them to succeed or, on the other hand, suppress their emotional growth and make them more vulnerable to stress and failure. The Lord has His way.