

Dina Ivanova demonstrating that the winner of the first Scarlatti Competition four years ago had indeed revealed an artist of rare sensibility and mastery.
The competition now in its fourth year is discovering some great artists at the start of illustrious careers. Just a few days ago Jeongro Park, winner ex equo of the second edition had opened this series with a recital that Oxana Yablonskaya had simply declared the finest recital she had ever heard. Coming from a living legend this is praise indeed.


I had arrived in Trapani too late to hear him although I had heard him play in the competition in 2024. Mikhail Kambarov, ex equo with Jeongro, is giving a series of recitals in this period too for the Keyboard Trust in Germany dedicated to it founding trustee Alfred Brendel.



I had flown to Trapani especially to listen to the 87 year old legend Oxana Yablonskaya as she seduced us yet again with her great artistry after having spent days dedicated to listening to aspiring young musicians. https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2026/04/13/oxana-yablonskaya-the-return-of-la-regina-a-sparkling-jewel-in-the-crown-of-trapani/
President of both the junior and the Scarlatti International, demonstrating in a pause from her jury duties to play herself, showing us that great artistry, like good wine, matures with the years. Madam Yablonskaya tells me that the day after the final prize winners concert on Friday she will fly to China to play Beethoven 4 with the New Zealand Philharmonic!
Age has no barriers as music is a lifelong passion that grows with experience and maturity and evidently unleashes superhuman energy.

Today we were gathered to applaud the young winner of the very first Scarlatti International that had been presided over by another remarkable octogenarian lady pianist, Marcella Crudeli. Dina Ivanova born in 1994 on Christmas Day, went on from Trapani to take first prize at the Rome International which is Marcella Crudeli’s creation and is now in its 33rd year!
Great ladies like Fanny Waterman in Leeds have been creating competitions that give a platform to extraordinary young artists at the start of important careers. Fanny quite simply bullied the great pianists of the day to come to her hometown, admonishing them as she told them that they had a duty to find the young artists who would become their heirs. Curzon, Magaloff, Fischer, Tureck Bachauer, Sandor, Nikolaeva and Yablonskaya were all bullied to give up their time as they discovered artists such as Alexeev, Perahia, Lupu, Schiff, Uchida and many more in its over half a century of existence .


Vincenzo and Giacometta Marrone D’Alberti are dedicating their lives to bringing great talent to Trapani, creating a voyage of discovery that each year is bringing lustre to the jewel in the crown of Sicily that is Trapani. Above all launching young artists at the start of their career, Vincenzo even inviting the winners of each competition to return to Sicily to play, as they in turn sit on the jury where it takes one artist to recognise another!


Dina had opened her recital, of course, with Scarlatti. Sonatas all in D minor that she played with a crystalline clarity and scintillating rhythmic drive. A sense of dance and a ‘joie de vivre’ that gave great character and an irresistible buoyancy to what in lesser hands can seem like cold exercises. Dina revealed them as miniature tone poems that are from the 550 that this genius of an originally Trapanese family, could pen whilst at the Spanish, Portuguese and English courts of the day, where he had found employment.
Dina even closed her recital after a breathtaking visit to Tchaikovsky’s ‘Nutcracker’ as seen through the eyes of Mikhail Pletnev, with a scintillating sonata ,K1, by Scarlatti where the ornaments glistened like jewels in the crown of Trapani. Playing of refined elegance with a palette of colours rivalled only by the crystal blue waters that glisten and glow as they gently lap the shores of this paradise.

The refined colours and atmospheres that Ravel could evoke in ‘Miroirs’ found in Dina the ideal interpreter. Notes just disappeared as they became streams of sound of undulating and pulsating colours as the moths of the first ‘Miroir’ glowed like will o’ the wisps flitting around the keyboard. Dina living every moment of this fantastic world that Ravel could create, with refined technical brilliance and extraordinary imagination painting in sound with glowing magic. A few long sustained notes were enough to suggest the sultry atmosphere in which these moths could flit about with impish freedom. The final note where Dina threw her arms into the air as she tried to catch one of these little devils such was her self identity with the sound world she was able to create with quite astonishing mastery.This is the true mastery of sound where Dina had a kaleidoscope of colours not only in her fingers but also in her feet, as her masterly pedalling could add sultry poignant weight creating imaginary atmospheres. There was a radiance to the sound as the saddest of birds in the second ‘Miroir’ became agitated with grieving supplication before resigning themselves to the beauty of their surrounds. Dina has such beautiful arm movements where her whole body is swimming in sounds of horizontal beauty never vertical brutality!. There was a fluidity and glowing radiance too to the ‘ocean waves’ that Ravel’s boat could float on with such ease in his third ‘Miroir’. Streams of notes that gradually grew in turbulence as Dina’s arm movements became ever more fluidly agitated. The calm after the storm was one of those magic moments that can only be discovered in live performance where time seems to stand still. Dina’s mastery could create with perfect equilibrium the gently lapping waves with the right hand as Ravel sings a hymn of thanksgiving in the left. Waves that were thrown off with leisurely nonchalance at the end as she had done with the moths in the first of these extraordinary ‘Miroirs’. There was a scintillating brilliance to the Morning Song of the Clown or The Jester’s Aubade of the fourth ‘Miroir’ ,where Dina’s spiky brilliance was filled with pulsating rhythmic energy. Bursting into a passionate song of seduction only to be overtaken by the energy that was previously generated and reaching boiling point with double glissandi and repeated notes, where Dina’s mastery was of quite breathtaking audacity. Generating such excitement that there was spontaneous applause from a public mesmerised by such sounds after the final exhilarating flourish. But Ravel has one more image to share with us, that he found in the valley of bells. It was here that after all the pyrotechnic fireworks of the Jester, Dina revealed her true mastery of sound with subtle colours where her chameleonic sense of touch and use of pedal created a glowing radiance that filled this vast hall with the magic atmosphere that only Ravel could ‘mirror’ in sound.

Dina brought a burning energy to the opening of Schumann’s ‘Carnaval Jest’ which reminded me of the overpowering energy that Richter seduced us with on his first appearances in the West in the 60’s, with op 1 and this op 26. I was reminded of this burning energy and total commitment , where Richter like Dina broke all the rules, but created new ones, with a discovery of the music that is a true recreation. A great wave of passionate sounds where even the almost Schubertian mellifluous outpourings rode on this wave of great architectural shape and meaning in what in lesser hands can seem very episodic. Even the ‘Marseillaise’ became part of this burning cauldron of emotions. Dina playing also with a clarity where the accompaniment to the melodic line was of such etherial clarity, as she has a true finger legato, which could allow the melodic line to sing but leave the accompaniment to be beautifully free and independent and not just bathed in pedal at the service of the melodic line. There was a disarming simplicity to the all too short ‘Romance’ followed by a ‘Scherzino’ of fleeting lightness, full of ‘joie de vivre’. This was a short-lived interlude as the ‘Intermezzo’ erupted with passionate intensity and sumptuous rich sounds. Dina’s mastery of balance allowed the melodic line to ride on a wave of luxuriant sounds without ever being submerged by the intensity of the passion that had overtaken the composer in these works for piano from op 1 to op 28. They had been inspired by the love for Clara, his teacher’s daughter, whom he was eventually to marry and who would be the mother of their eight children, before being committed to an asylum and an early death at the age of 46. Dina played the Finale with even more burning intensity and the final page was a cauldron of passionately intense waves of melody played with poetic brilliance and breathtaking audacity.

Pletnev has had a varied career from winning the Tchaikovsky competition and being a virtuoso pianist, to conducting his own Symphony orchestra. I remember Sandor telling me he could not understand why such a great virtuoso pianist would want to become a conductor! https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2022/12/12/mikhail-pletnev-in-rome-the-return-of-de-pachmann-fakefool-or-genius/
Pletnev was a great virtuoso in his youth but his sense of colour and extraordinary mastery of balance made conducting the obvious route for his prodigious talent . Early in his career he made some piano transcriptions of Tchaikovsky Ballet scores.The ‘Nutcracker’ helped him to victory in Moscow in 1978 and it is here that Pletnev’s genial pianistic mastery is at the service of Tchaikovsky’s wonderfully melodic scores, bringing them vividly to life on the piano as they are in the theatre. They are full of ‘tricks of the trade’ and require a pianist with a chameleonic kaleidoscope of sounds to be able to bring them to life. In short they need a musician who is also a magician. Dina showed us today that she has just such mastery as she brought vividly to life the various scenes from the ‘Nutcracker’. From the excitement and grandeur of the opening march to Tchaikovsky’s secret tool of the celeste that he was to surprise his audiences with as the ‘Sugar Plum Fairies’ danced with such glowing grace. There followed the scintillating ‘Tarantella’ with its hint of lyricism and sadness. Dina brought ravishing beauty to the Intermezzo with waves of sounds spread over the whole keyboard before the impish good humour of the ‘Trepak’ and the teasing brilliance of the ‘Chinese dance.’The opulence of the final ‘Andante Maestoso’ was of breathtaking sweep and passionate beauty. This transcription by Pletnev becomes an opera of art in its own right such is his complete understanding of the keyboard . Like Liszt or Thalberg the piano becomes a full orchestra and with the advent of the sustaining pedal what appears to be a three handed pianistic technique. With Pletnev one marvels at the seemingly many hands that go into its making as Dina showed us today with her breathtaking mastery.

And at the end of another masterly recital the Artistic Director and the President of the jury were ready to announce the contestants admitted to the semifinal round of the fourth Scarlatti International Piano Competition.


































































































































































