



Last night was the return to Leighton House of Magdalene Ho bringing her same extraordinary passion that comes from within the very notes themselves. Playing now with even more authority, as she has gained in experience and acceptance from a music world hungry for humility, intelligence and mastery. This is music making that comes from deep within and reminds me of Serkin. No seeking to find colour of outward tinsel or searching for beautiful sounds as these are the sounds that come from an artist who thinks more of the composer than herself. As Serkin said to Richard Goode on listening to the young Perahia : ‘ you told me he was good but you did not tell me HOW good!’



With her musical family gathered around the peacocks that abound in these parts last night, Patsy Fou and the Alexeev’ s were joined by some of the finest young talents at the RCM to listen and learn from an artist who has been blessed by the Gods.


Beginning her recital with a rarity that is one of the four fugues op 72 that Schumann writing to Mendelssohn described: “Even for me it is a strange and wonderful fact that almost every motif which forms within me bears the characteristics for multiple contrapuntal combinations”. 1845 was the year in which Schumann discovered his passion for composing fugues – a passion which he shared with his wife Clara. In joint creative sessions, Schumann composed his works for the pedal piano and his four piano fugues op. 72, which he wanted to be seen as “Character pieces but with a stricter form”, while Clara wrote her “Six Preludes and Fugues”. Even true connoisseurs of Schumann discover a new side to the composer in these works. Magdalene brought a simplicity of fluidity and a certain sense of improvisation as the fugue was shaped with great beauty. Schumann’s knotty twine immediately stamped with the voice of a composer who might be limiting his fantasy but not his poetic voice as Magdalene allowed this short work to unfold with such disarming innocence.


Leading straight into Beethoven’s early sonata op 10 n. 3. It is one of the first sonatas where Beethoven had expanded the ‘slow’ movement into an epitaph of grief and searching. The opening Presto was played with remarkable clarity and a dynamic drive of burning intensity. Even the beautiful second subject was not allowed a moment’s rest as it was incorporated into the continual forward movement. Magdalene’s clarity and precision were always with scrupulous attention to the composer’s very precise instructions. A development section that was a dizzying tour de force as notes were spread over the entire keyboard in an unrelenting chase, finally and dramatically coming to a halt before the innocent return of the opening moving towards a coda of brilliance and exultation. Magdalene waiting until she had collected her strength to embrace the ‘Largo e mesto’ that is a declamation of masterly invention. Pondering over every note with poignant fervour and almost convincing us that to play the movement in six instead of two was the only way forward! Some memorable moments not least the chorale with the melodic line doubled at the octave as it burst into a passionate cry out of which golden strands of reverberations were released . Deeply concentrated playing of tender authority as the opening Largo returned. Wonderful swirling sounds that accompanied the deep almost operatic beauty of the bass before the coda. But it was here in the coda that the slow tempo seemed rather exaggerated. The sighing syncopations that Beethoven writes lost something of its sense of line as the beat seemed to be missing in a too free recitative of deep significance. But Magdalene is a great artist and whatever she does is mesmerising because so convincing. As a famous stage director said to my wife when she apologised for not follow completely his instructions, ‘there is no such thing as right and wrong – just convince me!’ The famous slow tempi of Richter were convincing because they were of a musical genius who had pondered and suffered before uttering a single sound. Magdalene has this same inner integrity and it is a God given gift that can only be guided by people who truly understand but it cannot be taught. As Rubinstein was to exclaim ,’ You have to be born with talent ,you cannot teach it.’
https://youtu.be/gex0sOR7XZ0?si=798bjpruQBl2-e6t
An equally slow ‘Menuetto’ was where Magdalene seemed to be looking for something deeper than just a flowing mellifluous melodic line of simple innocence. It was in the Trio, though, that one could understand Magdalene wanting to underline the contrast, as she brought and infectious ‘joie de vivre’ bubbling over with wit and exhilaration as one voice replied playfully to the other. The same teasing brilliance to the ‘Rondo’ where the question and answer sprang to life with masterly brilliance and a remarkable technical control of Beethoven’s really quite scintillating jeu perlé. A dynamic drive and Beethoven’s absolute seriousness even when out to play with such ebullience and irresistible dynamism.


A refreshing interlude from Beethoven and Schumann was with Unsuk Chin’s Étude ‘Scherzo ad Libitum’ . Remarkable playful virtuosity of stopping and starting with inquisitive questioning. A continuous perpetuum mobile on which appeared skeletons rattling over the keys. As with all Magdalene’s performances it was totally convincing and just refreshed the atmosphere ready for Schumann’s magnificent Humoresque op op 21.
A work for long overlooked until both Horowitz and Richter showed the world what it had been missing for too long! Nowhere more are the duel personalities of the composer more in evidence than here. Eusebius living side by side with Florestan in an outpouring of breathtaking beauty and passionate intensity. Nobility and grandeur living side by side with poetic beauty and ravishment. An opening of beauty as Magdalene allowed the melody to unfold with beguiling simplicity before bursting into life ‘sehr rasch und leicht’.Playing of burning quixotic intensity before the return of the opening as if seen from afar. Turning into a wistful episode that Schumann writes on three staves showing us a musical line that is to erupt into scintillating brilliance and dynamic drive. A beautiful sense of nostalgia to the dance of ‘ Einfach und zart’ that follows, leading to an ‘Intermezzo’ with its notoriously busy double octaves. In Magdalene’s knowing hands we were not aware of the transcendental difficulties as it was the music that flowed without interruption just fading into the distance as the final episode is heard with rhapsodic beauty. An extraordinary outpouring of passionate intensity and virtuosistic brilliance leading to a final imperious march where Schumann miraculously incorporates a distant melody from within. A beautifully rhapsodic coda was played with an almost improvised freedom before the final call to arms of the ending. A remarkable performance not only for the technical mastery but for the architectural shape she could bring to a work that can seem so episodic.

A simple encore from a musician who hides behind the music and is such a humble servant that the idea to ingratiate herself is totally alien to her credo. However having said that she astonished us all with a most overwhelming performance of Saint- Saens’s old warhorse of ‘Étude en form de Valse.’ Of course with the historic performance of Cortot in our hearts Magdalene took us by storm with an equally breathtaking performance of mastery and beguiling charm.It brought us back to the salons of the Golden Age of piano playing when pianists at the end of a recital would let their hair down and seduce their audience with pianistic acrobatics and jewel like mastery . https://youtu.be/QJot3tfsUBM?si=ve4Iz7k_qer4RvR4



Magdalene already belongs to an elite class of pianists who listen to what they are playing and it is as if she is recreating the works as the composer would have imagined with the ink still wet on the page.
Hats off dear Magdalene ‘ je sens, je joue , je trasmet has never been so actual as in your hands today.























































































































































































