The magic world of Kausikan Rajeshkumar

Kausikan Rajeshkumar at S.Mary’s Perivale

It was a few years ago that I heard a young Sri Lankan pianist play at the Royal Festival Hall in the Martin Trust Young Musicians series.
It was an outstanding performance of Chopin’s B minor sonata together with a pieces by Villa Lobos .
I immediately made a note of his name as someone to watch out for and rushed back to inform my colleagues and founders of the Keyboard CharitableTrust,John and Noretta Leech .
And so it was that two years ago he appeared in the little town near to my home in Italy ,Sermoneta,to partecipate in the famous master classes at the Summer School founded by Menuhin and Szigeti ,
The great pianist and ever generous teacher Elisso Virsaladze returns every year for masterclasses to which the greatest young talents flock. Kausikan was one of the few selected by her to play in the final concert of her master students .
I still remember the magic of the Sonata n.2 by Scriabin ,the so called Fantasy Sonata in two movements .
A magic that was remembered too by many people on the beach the following day that had flocked to these very special concerts and had been entranced by this young pianist. .
And so it was today in the new series invented by that indefaticable Hugh Mather that we too were able to be entranced by this very performance .
An almost improvisatory performance such was his self identification with the sound world of Scriabin .
Full of subtle colours and demonic energy .
The two movements very much conceived as a whole with the fragmentary almost hinted melodies of the first united in the second movement in a triumphant final exposition … the famous “star” for which even in his early years Scriabin was searching.
Little did the public know that Kausikan has a unique improvisatory talent and can with great ease improvise in many different styles on any theme given to him .
We all admired the Brazilian pianist Gabriela Montenero at the Proms the other day.How she improvised in many different styles on the Sailors Horn Pipe tune so associated with the last night of the Proms.
I have heard Kausikan do similar and maybe even more and sincerely hope that he will share this with his public that is not used to what today is considered a unique gift.
It is a talent given to a young man who gained a first in Cambridge at a very early age having been trained in the piano at the Purcell School.
It is only now that we are seeing the remarkable results of British trained musicians from the Purcell and Menuhin Schools that give superb musical training to highly talented children whilst allowing them to combine normal school activities .
Kausikan from the remarkable school of Tessa Nicholson who has trained so many of the remarkable talents that are now coming to the fore.Gone is the age when we all looked to the East and to the USA for highly trained musicians whilst the British were admired for their musicianship but sadly lacking technical accomplishment .Now too the British musicians are in the forefront on the International Concert Scene.
It was ,in my opinion,a little too improvisatory, for the great E major Sonata of Beethoven ,the first of his last great trilogy of Sonatas.
Whilst as he rightly indicated in his excellent presentation,this is the most serene almost pastoral of the last Sonatas ,it does need to have a very solid backbone that sometimes Kausikan in his search for that special sound world of his and Scriabin slightly lost the pulse in the ebb and flow of this sublime music.
Not helped by an ungrateful piano two studies by Chopin and Liszt were given virtuoso performances greatly appreciated by our master of ceremony Hugh Mather.
It was refreshing to hear ” Waldesrauchen” by Liszt that I have not heard since Perlemuter played it as an encore after a monumental performance of the B minor Sonata ,some thirty years ago.
The most poetic of Rachmaninoff Preludes ,that in D major op 23 was followed by the final piece in the programme the tempestuous Etude Tableau in D op 39.
At the insistence of our very enthusiastic host and also a very appreciative audience we were treated to the so called ” minute” Waltz which Kausikan delivered in fifty five delicious seconds.

foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.

Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic

“He is so talented if only he would practise the piano more !” exclaimed Gordon Green of the young towsled haired Liverpudlian in our class at the Royal Academy in 1970.
A class that included Philip Fowke,Tessa Uys,John Blakely,Ann Shasby and Richard McMahon.
We all knew that Simon was more interested in forming and conducting chamber groups than he was playing solo piano.
But who could have predicted that he would become one of the great innovative conductors of our time and receive the Heros welcome at the Proms that he had this evening .
A monumental performance of Mahler’s 7th combined with a performance of Boulez’s Eclat for a chamber group .Played with a clarity and sense of line that the Master himself would have found hard to match .
The Mahler,of course,was a tour de force with the Berlin Philharmonic in magnificent form .

Yerma at the Young Vic

Shattering performance of Simon Stones Yerma from the original
 by Lorca at the Young Vic tonight . Tour de force of acting with almost no help from props or scenery . Amazing ,disturbing performance from Billie Piper
A standing ovation for a staggering unforgettable theatrical experience.
The three hour queue for a return ticket was a small price to play for such a shattering experience.

For the Glory of God at the Proms

Over fifty years ago I was taken to the Albert Hall by my piano “daddy” Sidney Harrison who was concerned that his star schoolboy pupil should receive the right nourishment from an early age.
And so that was the first occasion that I heard Bach`s Mass in B minor.
Later as a student at the Royal Academy I was privileged to hear two performances with Otto Klemperer and the unforgettable Janet Baker.
The former performance in the 1960`s I expect was for large choral forces but the second with Klemperer was much reduced and,of course, very slow with great weight and meaning to each note as one expected from a musician of such stature now passed into legend.
It was with Walter Legge`s legendary Philharmonia in the Festival Hall.
But nothing could have prepared me for the absolute clarity of line from William Christie and Les Arts Florissants tonight fifty years on.
This must have been what Bach heard and made one realise that it could not be any other way.
This is not music of effect but the greatest work ever dedicated to the Glory of God.

That is not to say that there was not much interplay and subtle rubato between the partecipants.This was no cold “authentic” performance but a live and moving experience.
Almost two hours,without interval, with six thousand people in total rapt silence following the inspired language that Bach had lain before them.
The famous Agnus Dei that was so memorable with Janet Baker here was sung by the counter tenor Tim Mead and how could it possibly be otherwise in this context.
Andre Morsch the magnificent baritone with Katherine Watson,soprano and Reinoud Van Mechelen ,tenor all singing with the magnificent chorus …there were no divas here but all equal together in the Glory of God !
What a lesson in real humility and absolute musicianship .
As if this was not enough it was preceded by a Proms Extra of a Paul Tortelier masterclass of Bach’s 3rd cello suite from vintage BBC television when television was still a means of instructing and informing .
None of these monosyllabic dramas of today, interrupted every fifteen minutes by advertisements that are often much better than the actual dramas so highly advertised by the PR boys!Yes Young Victoria is what I tried to digest the other day . Hard indeed to digest after having seen Yerma at the Young Vic and listening now the Bach B minor mass.
Endless reminders about television license ……..well I think they should pay us damages for having such rubbish transmitted into every living room in the land!

And there was our adorable Tortelier who often came to play in my theatre in Rome.
I asked him once to give a talk on Bach .He said he thought he might be able to talk for an hour.
Well after six hours of talking ,playing both cello and piano and involving all the public I had to ask him to stop in order to prepare for that evenings stage performance.
Actually it was Paul who said he would play in the so called authentic way when they discovered and authentic way of making recordings!
What an artist !Never forgotten…and there he was this evening as an aperitivo to the Greatest Work written to the Glory of God .He would have loved it!

 Maude and Paul Tortelier their favourite foto in our house in Rome and the foto  on the wall in the theatre that people always asked if he was my father ….now they think it is me!
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.

Ashley Fripp at St James’s Piccadilly

Stopped by an enthusiastic listener after Ashley Fripp `s exemplary recital.He said it was one of the best recitals he has heard for years.
Now living in Los Angeles I told him to go back to tell Ashley himself.
How much it can mean to an artist to have reached out to an unknown public.
But as Ashley, in his very eloquent introduction, said how grateful he was to be taken under the wing of the ever generous Canan Maxton and her exemplary Talent Unlimited that aims to help such great talent to be heard by a vast public whilst they embark on the long road to recognition.
One of several organisations that try to circumvent the International Piano Competition Circuit .
Together with the remarkable series of Hugh Mather in Ealing ,YCAT and the Keyboard Charitable Trust  organisations that offer an alternative route from the rather Circus like atmosphere of the Competition Circuit, where inevitably there can be only one winner, but unfortunately many disillusioned great talents.
Let us not forget that many of the great artists before the public today have never had success in competitions:Paul Lewis,one of the finest musicians this country has produced is now paradoxically artistic director of the Leeds International Piano Competition founded by another non winner: the remarkable Dame Fanny Waterman now in her 95th year.
Also amongst illustrious “loosers” are Andras Schiff and Angela Hewitt,both with justly remarkable careers.

Starting his recital at St James’s Piccadilly with Bach s English Suite in A minor,played with an inner energy even more remarkable for his magisterial sense of balance in the slow Allemande and Sarabande.
Maybe ,in my opinion,he could now take more leisurely tempi as that High Priestess Rosalyn Tureck had shown us in her last memorable recitals in my theatre in Rome when she was in her late seventies and eighties.

However let us not forget the she too was the “Young Firebrand” in her youth.
Ashley’s was remarkably assured musicianly playing and with maturity  he will be ,without doubt be  in the forefront of Bachian interpreters.
After all a really good wine matures with age.

Of course his Chopin playing we had already experienced on streaming from the Warsaw Competition.
An extraordinary Nocturne in D flat op 27 n.2 on a Kwai piano, was unforgettable .
The same magical sound and nobility was produced today in the Barcarolle and the Andante Spianato.

Having already heard , this summer, his very fine performance of the Barcarolle in Elisso Virsaladze’s masterclasses in Sermoneta .
Much impressed this great artist has taken Ashley under her wing and he will this winter have her unrivaled musicianly help and advice in Fiesole where all the greatest talents flock to her renowned classes.
A very fine Grande Polonaise Brillante ,that with this church acoustic could ,for my taste,have been taken at a more leisurely pace ,ended the recital .
After all are these not “canons covered in flowers”.

Certainly,as with the whole programme, this was playing of great assurance and conviction that can only get more profound with contact with the vast public that surely awaits.

foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
foto di Christopher Axworthy.
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