





On the eve of the final two days of ArtePiano International Piano Competition in Castelnuovo di Farfa the soprano Erica Eloff together with Pavle Krstic gave a recital of songs ranging from Britten’s beautiful Sally Gardens to Lehar’s enticing Vilja’s song from the Merry Widow.


The inhabitants out in force to take advantage of the ‘Wings of Song’ that illuminate their beautiful village once a year in the month of July .

A concert where the radiant voice of Erica Eloff ignited even more the torrid air of the beautiful Chiesa San Nicola di Bari with radiance, power and subtle beauty. A glorious outpouring of Strauss and intimate reflections of Fauré were complimented by four songs by Korngold and finally three almost operatic songs by Respighi .

But it was Vilja’s song that concluded the party atmosphere created by music in Farfa, when Erica encouraged the audience to join in the chorus of Lehar’s Merry Widow

Pavle playing always with refined elegance and mastery with the lid of his Steinway concert grand fully opened sharing the sounds together with Erica, creating a wonderful amalgam that resounded around this imposing edifice. Pavle a masterly musician who has learnt how to drive in Salzburg, winning the first competition in Farfa in 2021 and has been invited to return every year since as soloist and jury member

The grand finale tomorrow with the three chosen finalists playing in the Abbey of Farfa with the orchestra delle Cento Città.

Ryugo Yoshino was the first of seven selected semi finalists here in Farfa (Yu-Ting Su had to withdraw at the last minute ).They were invited to play a 30 minute programme to the distinguished jury chaired by Niel du Preez, the artistic director and founder of Arte Piano Festival .

Ryugo Yoshino at 17 is the youngest competitor and was born in Tokyo where he studies with Emanuel Rimoldi . A quite astonishing mastery of sound and colour allied to a technical mastery that seems to know no difficulties. The Carl Vine Sonata showed a technical mastery at the service of the music with a poetic fantasy and sense of line of astonishing maturity. Playing always of crystalline clarity and poetic imagination with a masterly use of the pedal and a chameleonic sense of touch allowing only him to find the sounds that were ingrained deeply inside this magnificent Fazioli Concert Grand.
Brahms’s Paganini Variations Book 1 revealed not only a technical mastery but a sense of style with a chameleonic sense of colour and weight. He may be a monster technically but he is most definitely a master and at 17 someone to watch. If his new found mastery was sometimes overwhelming and even too demanding for the listener, with maturity he will learn to control his youthful passion and energy and not allow it such free rein.

Mohammed Alshaikh at 23 is a master as he demonstrated with a performance of Ravel’s Ondine that was of such a refined transcendental mastery that it did not need to call attention to itself, as notes just slid from his fingers with gossamer ease and radiant beauty. A sense of balance that could allow the musical line to float on the magic sounds that he was creating. I heard Mohammed in Trapani last spring and know that he has been mentored by Oxana Yablonskaya.
Now studying in Berlin at the Barenboim – Said Academy it is the aristocratic authority and simple unadorned musicianship that he has inherited from one of the great ladies of our time. Chopin’s mischievous chromatic scale study op 10 n. 2 held no terror for Mohammed as he turned a problem into a miniature tone poem of beguiling insinuation. His Bach Prelude and Fugue was a courageous choice and showed the pedigree of a true musician but I found the Prelude a little too fussy missing the architectural shape that is so fundamental to every strand of this Universal Genius. It was the Danse Macabre by Saint-Saëns transcribed by Liszt and jazzed up unnecessarily by Horowitz, where Mohammed could show us what artistry really is! A memorable performance from a master musician who could turn a bauble into a gem with a wondrous sense of colour and sounds of sumptuous opulence. A poetic fantasy that kept us on the edge of our seats as this young artist brought every note vividly to life with exhilaration, excitement and seduction.

Yuna Nakagawa is from Japan and at 27 showed herself to be a professional pianist with a golden sound of opulent beauty. It was in the whispered opening of Bartòk’s Night Music that showed an artist of extraordinary sensitivity with a masterly control of sound as the repeated clashing cluster of notes was hypnotically maintained whilst all around the screeching and scratching of night creatures were revealed from Yuna’s chameleonic palette of sounds. Her performance of Chopin’s lesser known Nocturne from op 48 revealed an artist or rare understanding of Chopin’s elusive Bel Canto. She brought a controlled freedom and radiant beauty to this much neglected masterpiece. Chopin’s song ‘The Maiden’s Wish’ in Liszt’s arrangement has long been a favourite of the pianists of the Golden Era of piano playing. In particular Rachmaninov and Rosenthal and later even Arrau who could bring a charm and sense of colour of a different age that just eluded Yuna, where her ‘wish’ was a little too earthbound for this particular maiden. It was in ‘Los Requiebros’ from Granados’s Goyescas that she revealed her true artistry with her sumptuous golden sound and fiery temperament bringing to life this miniature masterpiece as only Alicia de Larrocha could have done.

Nikita is a true kapellmeister with performances of Beethoven and Liszt that were played like a true thinking musician. ‘Les Adieux’ held no terror for him as he allowed the music to unfold with a scrupulous attention to the composers indications. Even the ‘Andante espressivo’ was played in two not four and had a continual forward movement of ‘Absence’ that was to be short lived, making the vivacissimamente of the ‘Return’ even more enticing with playing of remarkable clarity and control. The ‘Spanish Rhapsody’ by Liszt was played very musically with a palette of colours and subtle phrasing that is rarely heard from pianists who are principally showmen rather than musicians. A remarkable technical control and fearless mastery that allowed the music to unfold with poetic fantasy and bravura. Nikita told me afterwards that he could have added some improvised cadenzas but preferred not to intimidate a jury that may not wish to get involved in discussions about performance practices of the day!

Momoko Kimura played ‘Le Cloches’ by Debussy with a refined tone palette of great beauty and ‘Poissons d’or’ revealed a great sense of style with insinuating sounds of capricious intent. Medtner’s Sonata ‘Tragica’ was a courageous choice which she played with commanding drama and masterly control. It is a long and difficult work but where she was able to give an architectural shape to Medtner’s sometimes overloaded intricacies, with a powerful committed performance of colourful fantasy and deep brooding drama of mastery.

Arsen I heard last spring in Trapani when he played the ‘Hammerklavier’ Sonata! https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2026/04/18/trapani-rules-the-waves-the-fourth-scarlatti-international-piano-competition/
He is a superb musician with a range of sounds and a technical mastery which he brought to all he played, beginning with three Studies from op 42 by Scriabin. Playing of capricious etherial radiance with a sumptuous outpouring of colours and the final op 42 n. 5 in particular was played with a masterly control of sound and a romantic sweep that was of breathtaking audacity. He was able to give a great architectural shape to Liszt’s ‘ Dante’ Sonata where he produced sumptuous orchestral sounds contrasting with moments of ravishing whispered beauty all played with a dynamic drive and fearless passionate intensity.

Jiwon Kim played Szymanowski’s notoriously complex Schéhérazade with an extraordinary range of colours with masterly playing of musical intelligence and imagination. Chopin’s Fantaisie on the other hand sounded rather over pedalled and lost much of the clarity of one of Chopin’s longest single movement works. An overall sound of plummy richness missing much of the filigree detail and contrasts that she had brought with such mastery to Szymanowski!




Seven short recitals all played with great commitment and mastery filling this beautiful San Nicola with music making even more remarkable than last year. I do not compare performances but listen and talk about what I hear, and the above comments are my own personal reactions to some of the remarkable performances that I have heard.


Unfortunately there is the circus element of competitions and a winner has to be found. But it is the platform and experience that it provides for these young musicians that is the most important thing. As Neil Du Preez says: ‘ Farfa is a place where music and humanity meet. At a time when the world often feels increasingly divided, we believe that music has the power to unite, inspire , and bring people together’ https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2016/05/16/piano-competitions-a-consideration/
And so to the final in the Abbazia di Santa Maria di Farfa with the Orchestra delle Cento Città directed by Alesandro Alonzi . Two Rachmaninov Second Concertos and the Tchaikovsky B flat minor. The early start of 14.30 in the blistering heat because the Abbey must be vacated for Mass by 18.30 .


Yuna Nakagawa the oldest of the three finalist was rather overawed by her surroundings and did not play as well as she had in her solo recital. Always beautiful golden sounds but moments of doubt arose where we expected passionate intensity. A rather disappointing performance that in the end robbed her of a prize.


Nikita Shestakov on the other hand is a true musician and played even better with his musician colleagues than he did on his own. He was intent on making music by listening very attentively to the orchestra and adapting and moulding his performance giving a great freedom that the orchestras reciprocated by entering on this voyage of discovery together.


Arsen Dalibaltayan gave a solid musicianly performance of Tchaikovsky’s well worn concerto. There was never a moment’s doubt that Arsen was very much in charge and although the orchestra got into some difficulty due no doubt to heat fatigue having rehearsed for three hours before the concert, Arsen attacked the solo part with dynamic drive and with moments of poetic beauty. The valiant Alessandro Alonzi had been a very considerate policeman at the helm of three very varied performances, never tiring of dedicating to each of the three young artists the maximum of his attention.










The final result was that Arsen came in first and Nikita second but real winners were all those that have been touched by the wind of music that has been blowing over the Sabine Hills in the past few weeks.

















































































































































































