


A night of stars at St Peter’s Acton Green where the new Parish priest has brought music and much else to a church I have known all my life but until last night had never crossed it’s hallowed threshold



Antonio Morabito had gathered many of his illustrious colleagues to listen to a recital of music that started with Mozart and finished by much demand with the Radetsky March .


Mark Viner an International piano star living around the corner in Bedford Park, https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2025/12/20/mark-viners-christmas-concert-2025-intelligence-scholarship-and-mastery-a-scintillating-cocktail-shaken-not-stirred/

Alberto Portugheis the veteran concert pianist, close friend of Martha Argerich who celebrates her 85th year today. Simonetta Allder, ballet critic and PR for the newly born Spoleto Festival of Daniele Cipriani and Marco Gambino International stage and screen star who was with a fellow Palermitano, founder with her late husband of the Ian Bostridge fan club. And last but not least Roger Nellist of the historic St Mary’s Perivale live stream concerts for great young talents .



And what a feast of music Antonio served us with his charming Italian accent explaining with passionate commitment the dishes he had prepared for his Cordon Bleu feast of music.
Fourteen dishes each one with a different flavour and prepared to perfection .

An imposing Fantasy by Mozart opened the concert and was an hors d’ouvre of refined brilliance, beautifully controlled with playing of intelligence that immediately showed Antonio’s pedigree from the hallowed temple of the Royal College of Music .The final work on the programme was Liszt’s concert paraphrase on Verdi’s Rigoletto, and it was here that Antonio’s Italian heritage was given full reign with a brilliant and scintillating performance of seductive beauty and style.
Four Scarlatti sonatas had shown Antonio’s chameleonic capacity to shape each one with beguiling beauty, turning these baubles into the gems in a crown containing over five hundred such marvels.



Four early works by Scriabin showed the influence that Chopin had on this eclectic composer whose ‘Mysterium’ theory later in life was aimed at transcending all earthly experience as he reached for the star.
Twinkle twinkle indeed but there was nothing vaguely twinkly with Antonio’s dramatic and virtuosistic rendition of his study in D sharp minor. It was on the palpitating tones of Scriabin’s ‘Revolutionary’ study that we were bade to adjourn for a ‘sorbet’ to whet our appetite for more.


After an extra long convivial, our genial host bade us take our places for a feast of Chopin and Liszt. In cockney slang it has a significance that would have been out of place in such wondrous company as this evening in Acton.
Two Nocturnes by Chopin and the Liszt Petrarch Sonnet 104 unfolded with radiance and beauty as Antonio’s innate love for music touched us all deeply.

No where more than in Chopin’s First Ballade op. 23 which is a tone poem that may have been inspired by the story line of a poem by Adam Mickiewicz .
‘Wretched am I amid the spiteful herd:
I weep—they jeer at me;
I speak—they cannot understand a word;
I see – they do not see!’
This poem by Adam Mickiewicz expresses intense and disturbing emotions—alienation, powerlessness, and morbid anxiety— that may be associated with the ideology of the Polish emigration in Paris in the 1830s. Only recently has this complex of ideas been linked to Chopin’s narrative works—by Karol Berger in “Chopin’s Ballade Op. 23 and the Revolution of the Intellectuals.”



Our host in thanking Antonio for his inspired performances, and the audience for turning out in such numbers on a Friday night. He asked timidly if Antonio might like to offer us a ‘limoncello ‘ after such a sumptuous feast.
Well it was like a red rag to a bull, as Antonio dashed to the piano and burst into a rousing performance of the Radetsky March preparing us for our homeward journey in typical British summer climes .

















































































































