

Alim Beisembayev at the Wigmore Hall with a programme of just three great works that announced his credentials even before he played a note.

Like Arrau a programme of works that have been pondered even suffered over before being shared .
And so this young man appeared and from the very first notes of Schubert’s Moments musicaux there was a concentration that was not just his but ours too. We became complice on a voyage of discovery where these miniature tone poems were recreated with almost improvised freedom with a palette of colours of whispered radiance and beauty.

Chopin’s F minor Fantasy given its rightful place as one of the greatest works of Chopin and after the interval a single work, the pinnacle of the Romantic piano repertoire .
The Liszt Sonata in B minor allowed to stand on its own with a monumental performance of mature musicianship allied to youthful technical mastery but above all an architectural shape of this genial masterpiece.
Four encores from this young ever generous musician: two by Scarlatti and two by Chopin. It was the Mazurka op 30 n 4 in C sharp minor by Chopin that summed up in just a few bars the supreme artistry of Alim that had seduced us all evening, with performances of breathtaking beauty and poetic invention.

It is fascinating to follow the career of Alim from the very first occasion in the Purcell School through many other concerts before and after his just recognition at the Leeds International Piano Competition. One thing has always shone out and that is his choice of master works where with humility and intelligence he has delved deeply into the scores and shared his discoveries with us with simplicity and mastery.
Beethoven op 10 n.3 ,Appassionata,op 110 and op 111. Chopin Preludes op 28 , Ravel Gaspard de la Nuit and Prokofiev 7 are just some of the interpretations that spring to mind. Of course mention should also be made of the Ligeti studies where Alim’s technical and intellectual mastery created astonishing webs of notes .
Today the spotlight was on the Liszt B minor Sonata which filled the second Half of his programme. The first half was to be dedicated to Schubert but quite wisely he decided to substitute the Wanderer Fantasy for Chopin’s much neglected Fantaisie in F minor. The Chopin so often played with other works of Chopin but rarely given the space it really deserves as one of the composers most remarkably original works and one of his longest single works too.
The concert, though, had begun with the six Moments Musicaux by Schubert. Another great pianist springs to mind Emil Gilels who I will never forget playing a recital also of just three works: Schubert Moments and little A minor Sonata and after the interval the Shostakovich Second Sonata. Not box office as the half empty hall showed but one of the most beautiful memories that has stayed with me for the past half a century.

Alim gave the same seemingly improvised freedom to the ‘Moments’ that I so remember from Gilels. Every note had a meaning and colour with Alim’s extraordinary concentration never demonstratively showing us what was in his poetic soul as that was revealed only to those that have the ears and the same concentration to follow the wondrous story that he is sharing. There was a radiance and beauty in the first with the return of the opening like seeing a friend after a long voyage from a magical journey through gasping accompaniments to mysteriously vibrant chords played with timeless beauty and aristocratic style. The second was played with a deep inner sadness of poignant beauty with even a dramatic cry played with extraordinary potency dissolving into playing of exquisite rarified beauty on a cloud of E flat that chimed with beguiling insistence. The third Moment, so memorable in the hands of Curzon, and where Alim today found the same teasing sense of dance of exquisite delicacy and buoyancy. ‘Perdendosi’ Schubert writes at the end that like a dream is probably continuing in the far distance unable to stop such incessant charm and grace. There was a whispered entry to what looks like knotty twine on the page in the fourth , but that Alim played with a fantasy of chameleonic harmonies that had a perpetuum mobile drive with a kaleidoscopic palette of colour and delicacy as a sudden ray of sunlight ignites with radiance the central ländler before continuing on it’s meandering journey . A genial coda where the two worlds are joined with whispered uncertainty played with poetic mastery by Alim . A driving buoyancy to the F minor Moment with an extraordinary echo effect of masterly control as this frenzied dance seemed to fall apart only to be put together again like Humpty Dumpty. Purity and simplicity of one of the most beautiful of Schubert’s creations followed with the sixth and final Moment , and was where Alim’s palette of sounds and wondrous sense of balance could make the piano sing as never before. There was a velvet whispered richness to the Trio contrasting with the return of the opening creating an atmosphere in the hall where we were united in aching moments of silence that were indeed golden.

Chopin’s Fantaisie op 49 is one of Chopin’s most loved works but it is rarely given the pedestal that it truly deserves. Alim restored it to its rightful place with a performance of scrupulous attention to Chopin’s markings and in particular his pedalling. Not allowing himself to be swayed by tradition but looking deeply into the score and revealing the noble strength that is in the notes themselves, without any need to add any idiosyncratic niceties that have been handed down through a so-called Chopin tradition. There is a strength and aristocratic beauty to this work that Alim exulted with masterly musicianship and fearless technical aplomb. From the very first notes marked staccato but also slurred with a long pedal at the end of the phrase that links these questioning phrases to their beautiful delicate answer. Staccato yes but what instrument is playing staccato? Maybe a cello with some vibrato ,Alim thought so too, but in such whispered tones that there was an ambiguity of great beauty. He brought a calming pastoral calm to the march like theme coming to rest on pianissimo chords with the opening heart beat motif throbbing gently in its midst. A quasi improvised passage of great freedom led to a fortissimo scale that announced the passionate intensity of agitation with a soaring melodic outpouring. The bass always acting as an anchor adding great strength to Alim’s playing as he fearlessly allowed the music to stream through his very being. Three pianissimo octaves of G flat brought calm and serenity to the central ‘Lento sostenuto’ chorale in B major. Alim managing the sudden interruption with mastery as the Fantaise is re -ignited with ever more intensity, as Chopin makes clear in the score. Coming to a momentary halt with a sudden unexpected ‘Adagio sostenuto’ which Alim played with timeless wonder, where the rests between the gasping delicate phrases were filled with poignant meaning . It led to a beautiful wave of sounds where Chopin asks for a single pedal over nine bars that Alim incorporated into a poetic fantasy world, only to be interrupted by the two final magisterial chords.
Listening to Alim I am reminded of the playing of Lipatti who could play with the same intelligence and simple beauty, works we have known for a lifetime that are suddenly reborn on wings of poetic mastery.

The Liszt Sonata was for me the main work on the programme today and it was given a place of it’s own as the only work in the second half. A monumental performance from a thinking musician who could give an architectural shape to a work that is really one long arch starting and finishing with the same whispered motif. Transformed in three continuous movements into moments of extreme delicacy, searing passion and fearless abandon. The whispered opening, like Alim’s ‘Appassionata’ was where the rests became as important as the notes, before bursting into flames of passionate declamations. This is just the opening where Liszt introduces us to the three main themes that he will transform into a work of extraordinary originality. If I felt many of Alim’s tempi in the more tempestuous moments rather too fast, it is obviously because Liszt does mark them in two not four. Alim fearlessly playing octaves with passionate outpourings of mastery and sumptuous rich sounds. There were menacing sounds too ,as with his ‘Appassionata’, where Liszt’s devilish rhythmic pulsating motif leads into the beautiful outpouring of ravishing beauty of the ‘Margherita’ theme. After breathtaking pyrotechnics of brilliance and scintillating streams of notes we came to sudden declamatory chords that Alim played with great power, again it was the rests that became of such importance. Alim is a master of balance and colour and it was this that he brought to the subtle beauty of the ‘Andante sostenuto’ and the passionate outpouring whose ultimate climax is the real centre of this mighty work. The ‘fugato’ that follows I really found too fast, but marvelled at the control and resilience that Alim could achieve and it did pave the way for the great bass entry which was every bit as powerful as I remember from Gilels’s magisterial performance many years ago. Alim is a thinking musician and there are no half measures once decided that this tempo in two was the way forward and what Liszt had intended. I think as he lives with this work longer he will find more nobility in these faster passages , maybe even as his youthful mastery makes way for a weightier way forward, like Arrau who was after all a direct descendent of Liszt via Martin Krause. There was a stillness and mastery of control that Alim brought to the final pages where Liszt had struggled with this ending crossing out his original blast and distilling these final two pages that are amongst the most remarkable in all music. A masterly performance of a thinking musican who can add another notable interpretation to the list of great works that he is revealing to his numerous and very appreciative audiences.

After the concentration and intensity of three masterly performances, Alim could now relax and calm the air with four encores played with beauty, charm and wit. Chopin’s Aeolian Harp study op 25 n. 1 was played with a melodic line that glowed on a bed of changing harmonies as it was shaped with heart warming beauty. A Mazurka op 30 n. 4 that I have never heard played with such simplicity and ravishing beauty. Two Sonatas by Scarlatti, the first a melodic outpouring of intense contrapuntal weaving played with glowing simplicity. The second with a wit and charm of scintillating perfection where the tension of intense concentration had been relieved and we were ready to leave uplifted by such mastery.


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