


Herman Med Cerisha at La Mortella where the Walton’s offer a platform for young musicians in the paradise that they created together on the island of Ischia. They now survey the scene from the highest point of their estate adding their blessings to the many young musicians that are given a platform here in the Bay of Naples.


Today it was the turn of the twenty year old Italian born pianist, Herman Cerisha, who has for the past six years been guided by Florian Mitrea in the UK at the Purcell School and is now completing his studies at the Royal Academy. It was Prof Deniz Gelenbe judging the Beethoven Competition at the RAM, who had tipped me off about the remarkable talent of this young man.


Lina Tufano always ready to encourage great talents immediately invited him to play at La Mortella. It was her great friend Susana Walton who was particularly keen to encourage and help talent at a very early stage. The Walton Foundation was specifically created by Susana ,Lady Walton to honour the memory of her husband and their legacy that they had created together.


Sir William’s centenary was celebrated in 2002 in the presence of his Majesty King Charles and now this year we celebrate Susana’s centenary with a series of concerts in many parts of the world including a performance of the Walton cello concerto at the Proms. In the quarter of a century that Susana was left on her own she has been an indefatigable promoter of her adored husband and their work together, and single handed has made their estate grow into a thriving cultural centre of excellence where La Mortella is truly a jewel shining brightly on the world stage.



Their legacy is assured, as Lady Walton very mischievously added, because no one would want to evict them from an estate where the two founders were actually buried !


Herman presented his credentials before even touching the Steinway that was lain before him. A true artist is known by his programmes, just as a painter is, by his canvas, and the three masterworks that Herman presented immediately showed that here was a very serious musician who thought more of the composer than himself.


Beethoven’s ‘Waldstein’ Sonata was followed by Schubert’s magical A minor sonata before the explosion of Prokofiev’s 7th, the second of his three War Sonatas. Even the encore of Beethoven’s Bagatelle op 126 n 3, that he dedicated to Lady Walton, showed a rare eclectic musician who preferred to delve deeply into one of the last thoughts of a universal genius, rather than titivate the senses with a showpiece of sparkling brilliance.
These three master works I have heard Herman play in London and below is a detailed review of those performances . Herman is an artist, whilst understanding the structure and beauty of these works, he also tells me that he is particularly stimulated by an audience and together discover even more details and poetic moments on a wondrous voyage of discovery. As Picasso told his friend Rubinstein when the great pianist had commented that the subject of his latest canvasses was always the same. Picasso admonished him by saying that it was true, but that it was he that changed and could see the same objects in a different light every time he looked at them.


It was Delius who dismissed Beethoven as being all scales and arpeggios but what scales and arpeggios they become when seen through the eyes of a universal genius! Herman played with a dynamic rhythmic drive allowing the tension to wane for the second subject but not the overall pulse that Herman had created with such whispered vibrancy. He even discovered some very beautiful inner counterpoints that shone like jewels in a well worn landscape that he illuminated with a beguiling half light. An ‘Adagio’ played with poignant whispered intensity where the rests became of crucial importance and the change of colour on the non legato notes chasing each other across the keyboard with languid weight, were of orchestral colour. In fact all through his performance, whilst paying scrupulous attention to the composers markings there was a clarity and a masterly use of the pedals that became another section of the orchestra that he was conducting with such authority. This introduction suddenly was called to attention with a rather abrupt G that Herman knowingly dissolved onto a flowing web of sounds held in the long pedals that Beethoven had inherited from Papà Haydn, his original mentor. Wonderful rich bass chords gave great depth to the ever increasing sound of the contrasting episodes until the explosion of jewel box brilliance of the coda. Herman fearlessly playing the glissandi as Beethoven indicates where many pianists are afraid of covering the keys with blood on a keyboard with more weight than in Beethoven’s day. Serkin, always so scrupulous, would surreptitiously lick his fingers before attempting to obey his master.


Schubert was played with very careful pedalling never disturbing the gentle gasping wave of sounds that accompanied his genial mellifluous outpourings. Dynamic outbursts played with rhythmic precision and musicianly beauty but always with the architectural shape mind. Within this framework he could also add the freedom of poetic intensity passing from burning passion to sublime simplicity and radiance. The ‘Andante’ was where the rests became of crucial importance as the beauty of the melody was interrupted by whispered menace. The ‘Allegro vivace’ was played with streams of golden notes woven together with an intense rhythmic drive before bursting into strident declarations of intent. Schubert always has a surprise in store and the beauty of his melodic invention that interrupts this perpetuum mobile was even more remarkable for the beautiful finger legato that allowed Herman to play the accompaniment with unusual clarity that it became a duet between two voices of his orchestra. Herman displayed transcendental mastery with the infamous double octaves with which Schubert, in Beethovenian vein, abruptly brings to a close such poetic musings. It was here with the final four chords, each played with a different colour and poetic shape, that Herman showed us that these chords usually played with a final sigh of relief, today were played as belonging to the poetic musings of a great artist.



Prokofiev 7th Sonata was played with a kaleidoscope of colour as the first movement unfolded with violence mixed with harrowing beauty . An ‘Andante’ of opening radiance and sumptuous beauty before erupting and taking us to a land of desolation and desperation . The ‘Precipitato’ was a ‘tour de force’ of palpitating brilliance, where Prokofiev throws everything into the arena but never abandons the desperation and repeated insistence of the advancing troupes.

Beethoven’s ‘trifle’ op 126 n 3 was played with a simplicity and poetic beauty where at the end of a turbulent life Beethoven, like Mozart, could express so much with so little. Herman’s masterly use of Beethoven’s long pedals took us to a world that the composer could already envisage on the horizon, and am sure would have brought a knowing smile to Lady Walton to whom it was dedicated by Herman, in her centenary year.






First evening:
L.V. Beethoven – Piano Sonata no.21 in C major, op.53 “Waldstein” (23 minutes)
F. Schubert – Piano Sonata in A minor D784 (19 minutes)
S. Prokofiev – Piano Sonata no.7 in B-flat major, op.83 (19 minutes)



Second evening:
L.V. Beethoven – Piano Sonata no.21 in C major, op.53 “Waldstein” (23 minutes)
F. Chopin – Scherzo no.3 in C sharp minor, op.39 (8 minutes)
F. Chopin – Ballade no.4 in F minor, op.52 (12 minutes)
S. Prokofiev – Piano Sonata no.7 in B-flat major, op.83 (19 minutes)





































































































































