12/25/2010 – We wish all our readers and friends, all over the world, a Merry Christmas
2010, wherever they are and in whatever
language they speak. The greetings are sent to you from snow-covered Hamburg,
in the north of Europe frozen to a standstill, with thousands stranded at airports
and train stations, trying desperately to get to their loved ones. Here is something
to cheer them up.
new: Fritz 20
Your personal chess trainer. Your toughest opponent. Your strongest ally. FRITZ 20 is more than just a chess engine – it is a training revolution for ambitious players and professionals. Whether you are taking your first steps into the world of serious chess training, or already playing at tournament level, FRITZ 20 will help you train more efficiently, intelligently and individually than ever before.
Your personal chess trainer. Your toughest opponent. Your strongest ally. FRITZ 20 is more than just a chess engine – it is a training revolution for ambitious players and professionals. Whether you are taking your first steps into the world of serious chess training, or already playing at tournament level, FRITZ 20 will help you train more efficiently, intelligently and individually than ever before.
Grandmaster Dr. Karsten Müller, one of the world’s leading endgame experts, guides you step by step through everything you need to know in this second volume.
€39.90
Christmas surprises
The "Hallelujah" chorus by George Frideric Handel, composed in London
during the summer of 1741, is one of the most beautiful and popular works in
the Western choral literature. Although the work was conceived for secular theatre
it was, like almost all music at the time, religiously inspired. Today you can
hear it everywhere during the Christmas season The Royal Melbourne Philharmonic
has performed it for 157 years in succession, and the Bethany College, Lindsborg,
Kansas, at least once every year for the past 130 years. The oratorio premiered
in Dublin, Ireland, on 13 April 1742. On a trip there we found the following
original scoresheet in the Christ Church Cathedral.
The above video, which you will notice has been watched by over 25 million
visitors, reminds me (Frederic Friedel) of something that happened many years
ago – during a Kasparov match and before the age of pocket video cameras
and YouTube unfortunately.
I was strolling with my wife around Covent Gardens in London, where there are
a number of open-air cafés. We were approached by an inconspicuous young
woman in jeans and t-shirt, a student type, who held a hat towards me. I smiled
and said “What for?”. She smiled back and did not reply. I followed
up with “If you want money from me I need to know what it is for.”
In the background there was a music box playing some classical strains. She
kept smiling and holding the hat.
Suddenly, cued by the music, she started to sing Carmen’s Habanera, from
two feet away, in a breath-taking rich contralto. I believe there is still a
puddle in Covent Gardens from the partially melted Fred. I gave her all the
money I had, plus my watch, fountain pen and cuff links. She was part of an
operatic students group and had given me the most intense musical experience
of my life. To get an impression of what it was like watch the following video
and imagine Angela Gheorghiu in jeans and a t-shirt, standing in conversational
distance from you.
Well, after this interlude on to our yearly Christmas puzzles, for which a
lot of readers have been clamouring.
This year the puzzles have been selected and will be presented by the world
problem solving champion Dr John Nunn, who will each day between Christmas
and New Year show us a variety of challenges, with no two installments being
of exactly the same type. There will also be some very nice prizes, which will
be announced during the course of the week. Here are the links you will need:
In this video course experts examine the games of Bent Larsen. Let them show you which openings Larsen chose, where his strength in middlegames were, how he outplayed his opponents in the endgame & you’ll get a glimpse of his tactical abilities!
From the 2026 Candidates Tournament, featuring a video review by Dorian Rogozenco, to Jan Werle’s opening video on the French Tarrasch Defence, and Oliver Reeh’s tactical column ‘Top Grandmasters at Work’. Analyses by Giri, So, Wei Yi and many others.
You will learn how Black's dynamic piece activity and structural counterplay more than compensate for White's extra tempo in the colour-reversed setups.
In this course, you’ll learn how to take the initiative against the London and prevent White from comfortably playing their usual system by playing 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 Nh5.
London System Powerbase 2026 is a database and contains in all 11 285 games from Mega 2026 and the Correspondence Database 2026, of which 282 are annotated.
The London System Powerbook 2026 is based on more than 410 000 games or game fragments from different opening moves and ECO codes; what they all have in common is that White plays d4 and Bf4 but does not play c4.
In this course, Grandmaster Elisabeth Pähtz presents the London System, a structured and ambitious approach based on the immediate Bf4, leading to rich and dynamic positions.
€59.90
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