


I have heard Milda over the past few years and her musical progress has been remarkable. The very first time I heard her was at her audition for the Keyboard Trust where Leslie Howard was completely won over by her personality both at the keyboard and in the short interview afterwards.
I have since heard her at the National Liberal Club series for the KT and even went on tour with her to Italy. In Florence she not only captivated the elite audience in the Harold Acton Library but she even captivated some Lithuanian waiters in a restaurant the next day with whom she was happy to share her music in return for a free lunch, a red rose……..and a glass of Limoncello she mischievously added later! With Milda you get what you see! Music is so much part of her that her music making takes on a radiant sense of discovery and ebullient joy with the beauty and eloquence that pours from her fingers with music speaking even louder than words. It is thanks to her teacher Tessa Nicholson who over the past years has given her a technical mastery which you could well describe as ‘canons covered in flowers’.

Milda has acquired an authority and burning conviction that makes all she plays come to life with the hypnotic intensity of an artist who thinks more of the music than herself. What better way to start a recital than with Beethoven’s early Bagatelles or trifles with the simplicity of almost childlike story telling. This is Beethoven with the refined sensibility that is not usually associated with his irascible turbulent genius. Milda living every moment as she recounted Beethoven’s ‘fairy tales’ where every note spoke with an eloquence of charm, grace and an unusual finesse for the gruff assertions that we usually associate with Beethoven. What fun she had with Beethoven’s playful ‘Scherzo’. An almost too serious ‘Trio’ was played with a burning intensity and richly melodic octaves where she slightly lent on the lower note giving great depth to her playing. The ‘Allegretto’ was of Schubertian eloquence, played with a refined tonal palette of radiance and beauty. The ‘Andante’, a pastoral outpouring of disarming simplicity, becoming Beethoven’s ‘Au bord d’une source’ in Milda’s magical hands. Skittish arpeggios were just thrown into the air in the ‘Allegro’,an ease as the hands squabbled with each other until their final impish farewell. It contrasted with the rich quartet quality that she brought to the melodic outpouring of hymn like depth of the penultimate bagatelle. The final ‘Presto’ was a whirlwind of vibrant vitality with Beethoven’s long held pedals merely passing clouds in this effervescent crescendo of frenzy.

The Chopin Ballade with its opening tolling bell was embraced by a deeply felt melancholy with a forward movement of uplifting vibrancy. Carrying us forward like a barcarolle, before the turbulent interruptions of passionate intensity. Milda’s playing has a way of opening a window on a fantasy world that is created by the immediacy and conviction of her artistic vision. Swirling sounds wafted over the keyboard with a technical mastery that was never ostentatious but became part of the story that she was sharing with us. Outbursts that were short lived as Chopin seems lost and searching for a way forward before arriving at the tolling bells, this time of trills announcing the agitation of the coda. Fearlessly played by Milda throwing caution to the wind as her driving conviction swept away all before her. The opening ‘berceuse’ now timidly showing its face growing out of the vibrations left from such turbulence. It was played or rather whispered, showing a masterly control of the pedal as she brought this story to the end that was in the gasping silence that followed the final short chord.

It was Schumann who described Chopin’s Mazurkas as ‘canons covered in flowers’ and that I had quoted earlier to describe Milda’s artistry. The last published Mazurkas in Chopin’s lifetime and as Milda said in her introduction, in each of these three Mazurkas op 63 there is an overwhelming abundance of invention. Was this a composer who could see death all around him and needed to give space to the wonders that were still in his soul. Certainly Milda believed this to be true as she played with an improvised freedom of radiance and glowing beauty. In this first Mazurka there was the same feeling of dance of the ‘ecossaise’ with a ‘joie de vivre’ of infectious vitality.The F minor Mazurka was of heartrending beauty of beseeching radiance which Milda imbued with a kaleidoscopic palette of emotions of refined sounds.Milda brought a beguiling insinuation to the C sharp minor Mazurka so similar to the poignant nostalgia of Chopin’s later waltzes.

It was the Fantasy of Schubert in the ‘Wanderer’ that matched so perfectly Milda’s temperament and fearless search for the meaning behind the notes. Schubert always with a ‘song in his heart’, even in the most outrageously virtuosistic passages of a work that was to lead the way and create a new form for future composers. It was so admired by Liszt that he even transcribed a version for piano and orchestra and Schubert’s ‘leitmotif’ in the Wanderer, via Liszt, was to inspire his son in law Richard Wagner. Milda played with brilliance and nobility, her natural technical mastery at the service of the music with burning intensity, delicacy and radiant beauty. There was a deep brooding as the intensity abated and the ‘Wanderer’ appeared on the scene. Milda brought a depth of sound to this song where every note of the chords spoke so eloquently of profound aristocratic emotions. Allowing the variations to unfold like characters appearing on stage in a quasi operatic panorama of human emotions.There was the radiant beauty of a true bel canto answered by the poignant supplication of the tenor. Unfolding with the washes of sound of a perfectly shaped jeux perlé as drama suddenly took centre stage. A remarkable technical control as Milda lived every moment with vibrant conviction. Bursting into the dynamic drive of the ‘Scherzo’, a lilting unstoppable Schubertian outpouring with streams of notes, mere frissons of exhilarating embellishments. The ‘Fugato’ entered with a driving mastery and nobility. A ‘tour de force’ of transcendental piano playing but such was her mastery she could even snatch a breath ,as Arrau was wont to do, before the final few bars of a continuous crescendo to the conclusion of yet another story told by a master storyteller.

Lithuanian pianist, Milda Daunoraite, began her piano studies at the age of six. She received her formative education at The Purcell School of Music and is currently studying with Tessa Nicholson at the Royal Academy of Music, on a full fees scholarship, where she is a recipient of the ABRSM Scholarship Award. She is supported by The Keyboard Charitable Trust, ‘SOS Talents Foundation – Michel Sogny’ and the Mstislav Rostropovich Foundation. Her performances have been featured live in forty countries through Mezzo TV, Radio Classique, TV5 Monde and Lithuanian National Television and Radio. In 2018, Milda performed the Fourth Piano Concerto by V. Bacevicius for the Lithuanian National Philharmonic Society with the Latvian National Symphony Orchestra. This concert was broadcast across Europe by Euroradio (EBU). She has performed at venues such as Wigmore Hall, the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, Musikhuset Aarhus, the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, at the EMMA World Summit of Nobel Prize Peace Laureates in Warsaw and many others. Milda’s recent performances include a recital in the Laeiszhalle Recital Hall in Hamburg, at the Deal Music & Arts Festival, at the Petworth Festival, Biarritz Piano Festival and at the Palermo Classica Festival. Milda won the Purcell School’s Concerto Competition which gave her the opportunity to perform Ravel’s Piano Concerto in G major at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London. She also won First Prize in the international V. Krainev Piano Competition in Kharkov, Ukraine; the ‘Jury‘ Prize in the Pianale International Academy & Competition in Germany; and First Prize in the fourth International Piano Competition in Stockholm.

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