Magdalene Ho – the genial ‘Clara Haskil’ winner at 19 takes Leighton House by storm

Genius is hard to define but when you hear it there is no doubt of it’s presence .Tonight Magdalene Ho kept us enraptured by her total concentration and burning intensity mixed with an obvious shyness when her hands left the keys and she had to join us mortals on equal ground .
I remember hearing an 18 year old fresher at the RCM electrifying the audience at the Joan Chissell Schumann Competition with the Eighth Novelette of such luminosity and ravishing beauty but also total commitment to the sounds that were pouring out of her minuscule frame .
The next I knew Patsy Fou rang me during the night to say she had won first prize in the Clara Haskil competition in Switzerland.(Haskil one of the greatest musicians of her time similar today to Pires)
Now in the great hands of Dmitri Alexeev her playing has grown in strength and nobility as a young girl becomes a sensitive woman more aware of the world around her.
Bach playing of such clarity and architectural strength .
Beethoven’s op 109 of radiance and searing aristocratic beauty. But it was the Schumann Carnaval of extraordinary character and authority ,where Florestan and Eusebius could finally live together in such secure sensitive hands,that showed us what the word genius can really mean.

From the very first notes of Bach it was evident that we were in the presence of a great personality.
A rhythmic energy within the notes themselves that gave nobility and architectural shape to the fantasy.
The whispered entry of the fugue that was played with clarity and purity but with that same burning intensity that brought every strand of this genial knotty twine vividly to life.It built almost unnoticeably to a climax such was her control of the sound within the notes themselves.
A magnificent declaration of faith by a fervent believer.
With baited breath we awaited her reappearance.There was a long pause where I imagine that she was not convinced that the piano was responding to her call for colour and luminosity.
The two things that had been so astonishing in her Schumann performance in the RCM.
She like Thomas Kelly five years previously in the Joan Chissell Schumann contest had a ‘sound’.A sound that is created by artists who have a musical palette that comes from who knows where,but leads to a dedicated search for sounds as the music speaks directly to them.
Rubinstein likened it to the Bees who search out different flowers to make their pollen ,drawn by the scent that appeals to their senses.No Honey is the same as each one represents the personal choice of the Bee.For the musician it is the total dedication to the sound that they are making and may indeed be considered a musical genius as it is so very rare to find in such an early age.But these young artists have dedicated their youth to searching for the beauty that their soul demands.The trial and tribulations of life – like for Beethoven – are not part of the equation for them.Both Magdalene and Tom are lucky to have the Alexeev’s to guide them through this incomprehensible maze so their great talent can find the road where it can grow and prosper.They have been bequeathed to the Alexeev’s :two genial young musicians – by Andrew Ball for Thomas Kelly ( who will close this season of ‘Discoveries’ on the 27th February )
https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2023/02/14/a-celebration-of-the-life-of-andrew-ball-the-thinker-pianist-at-the-r-c-m-london
and by Patsy Fou,the widow of Fou Ts’ong, for Magdalene Ho.
https://christopheraxworthymusiccommentary.com/2021/01/13/roberto-prosseda-pays-tribute-to-the-genius-of-chopin-and-the-inspirational-figure-of-fou-tsong/
There was again absolute clarity in the beautifully mellifluous opening of Beethoven’s op 109 with a scrupulous attention to the composers indications.She even avoided (mostly) the pianistic splitting of difficult runs between the hands.This was Beethoven deliberately showing the struggle that was certainly not an easy stroll in the countryside!(a debatable point but one in which at least the struggle must remain).Magdalene brought the same burning intensity to the recitative interruptions where she played with vehemence and startling conviction.It was the same forward movement that was so evident in the scherzo where the trio,so feared by lesser hands, was filled with buoyancy and character.
There was a maturity and aristocratic purity to the Theme and Variations that is the true heart of this work.The theme was played like the Arietta of op 111 with the same string quartet quality that was to be so overwhelmingly poignant in the last great string quartets.
The variations unfolded so naturally with the expressive ornaments on the beat in the first variation that added weight to what in lesser hands can sound so frivolous!Here was a whole world unfolding with just so few notes.The lightness of the staccato of the second variations was miraculously answered by the delicate legato of the answering phrases.The third variation shot from her fingers with enviable security but it was also shaped like a living stream of sounds.Rosalyn Tureck crossed my mind on experiencing such mastery .She simply said :’but I do not play wrong notes’- because every note had a meaning in a chain that made an architectural whole,just as Magdalene revealed today.
There was a nobility and driving energy to the fourth variation as it lead into the miraculous sublimation of the theme where Beethoven, like Scriabin a century later,was to see and experience the ‘star’.Magdalene played like a woman possessed with passion and beauty but above all with simplicity where the music was allowed to speak for itself.
Schumann Carnaval was a work that won the hearts of the jury in the Clara Haskil competition.It was indeed a ‘tour de force’ of artistic sensibility and virtuosity allied to a feeling for the characters than enter and exit with such wondrous variety from Schumann’s pen.
All the fun of the fair you might say but there is much,much more to it than that as a secret world opens up which Magdalene shared with us again today.
She even included the ‘Sphinxes’although not quite as Mussorgskian as Rachmaninov did in his famous recording :
https://youtube.com/watch?v=qU4ZLZF2gZY&feature=shared.
The opening was a call to arms but not of the military but more the sumptuously civilised sounds of the Vienna Philharmonic.A fullness without hardness as she opened the door to all the fun of the Carnaval with a fast and furious ‘Più moto’.There was time for charm too but her sense of line and burning intensity realised that this was just the introduction and the characters she would introduce to us with loving care later.
A subdued ‘Pierrot’ was beautifully shaped and ‘Arlequin’ just flew from her fingers with enviable ease and precision.I doubt the ‘Valse Noble ‘ has ever sounded so grandiloquent.’Eusebius’ was allowed to murmur with innocent purity before the fun she was about to have playing with ‘Florestan’.A remarkable sense of character that I have rarely heard so evidently joyous.
‘Coquette’ and ‘Replique’ that followed were played with fleeting chameleonic charm and beguiling ease.After the simple exposition of the almost too serious ‘Sphinxes’ ‘Papillons’ just shot from her fingers with subtle gentle sounds.’Lettres Dansantes’ flew over the keys ,with the same ease, from her well oiled fingers but with an infectious buoyancy that reminded us that this was after all a Carnaval!
‘Chiarina’ was taken rather fast for Schumann’s dedication to his beloved but it was played with great intensity building up to a climax on which ‘Chopin’ made his entry. Not the sickly composer of tradition but the greatest poet of the piano of fervent sentiments of aristocratic nobility.’Estrella’ just exploded as Chopin lead her into this Carnaval with his own hand. ‘Reconnaissance’ fluttered with beguiling ravishing brilliance before the squabbling of ‘Pantalon et Colombine’ who almost made peace in the ‘meno presto’ legato conversation.The final word though goes to ‘Pantalon’ after the beseeching requiescense of Colombine.An ending played with simple child like charm.’Valse Allemande’ was coquettish but also refined and eloquent before Paganini interrupted the proceedings with the same truly phenomenal virtuosity that this first great showman who could ignite animalistic passion in the refined salons of the period.Magdalene played with the passion and virtuosity of someone truly possessed and when she finally landed on the last chord she had enough breath left to allow a glimmer of it to rise from the ashes as the Valse nonchalantly re-entered the scene.’Passionato’ Schumann marks ‘Aveu’ but Magdalene saw it differently and gave us a beautifully shaped interlude before greeting an old friend in the deeply nostalgic ‘Promenade’.The demonically busy ‘pause’ lead into the triumphant March of the ‘Davidsbundler’ against the ‘Philistines.’
This for Magdalene was like a red rag to the bull and she went for it with breathtaking energy and drive earning her spontaneous cheers from her pianist friends in the audience who had come to support their dear companion de voyage.
‘Hats off Gentlemen a Genius’ ……were Schumann’s own words!
A Liszt transcription of ‘Fruhlingsglaube’’ by Schubert was her way of thanking a hall that was full to the brim with music lovers who had obviously heard that someone very special had arrived on the musical scene.Played by a true musician but I felt ,like her I am sure ,that all those colours that she has in her fingertips were not given the opportunity to seek out more than the sounds this piano could offer.
Patsy Toh ,Tatyana Sarkissova ,Yish Xue and friend
Patsy Toh
Magdalene with Dmitri Alexeev after the concert
That man with the red scarf

Carnaval. Scènes mignonnes sur quatre notes Robert Schumann

Robert Schumann
Born 8 June 1810
Zwickau,Kingdom of Saxony
Died 29 July 1856 (aged 46)
Bonn , Rhine Province,Prussia

Carnaval had its origin in a set of variations on a Sehnsuchtswalzer by Franz Schubert , whose music Schumann had discovered only in 1827. The catalyst for writing the variations may have been a work for piano and orchestra by Schumann’s close friend Ludwig Schuncke,a set of variations on the same Schubert theme. Schumann felt that Schuncke’s heroic treatment was an inappropriate reflection of the tender nature of the Schubert piece, so he set out to approach his variations in a more intimate way, working on them in 1833 and 1834.

Schumann’s work was never completed, however, and Schuncke died in December 1834, but he did re-use the opening 24 measures for the opening of Carnaval

The 21 pieces are connected by a recurring motif . The four notes are encoded puzzles, and Schumann predicted that “deciphering my masked ball will be a real game for you.”

Both Schumann and his wife Clara considered his solo piano works too difficult for the general public. ( Chopin is reported to have said that Carnaval was not music at all.Chopin did not warm to Schumann on the two occasions they met briefly and had a generally low opinion of his music.) Consequently, the works for solo piano were rarely performed in public during Schumann’s lifetime, although Liszt performed selections from Carnaval in Leipzig in March 1840, omitting certain movements with Schumann’s consent. Six months after Schumann’s death, Liszt later wrote that Carnaval was a work “that will assume its natural place in the public eye alongside Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations, which in my opinion it even surpasses in melodic invention and conciseness”.

Sphinxs consists of three sections, each consisting of one bar on a single staff in bass (F) clef, with no key, tempo, or dynamic indications. The notes are written as breves . The pitches given are the notes E♭C B A (SCHA) and A♭C B (AsCH) and A E♭C B (ASCH). Many pianists and editors, including Clara Schumann, advocate for omitting the Sphinxs in performance.

These are musical cryptograms , as follows:

  • A, E♭, C, B – German: A–Es–C–H (the Es is pronounced as a word for the letter S)
  • A♭, C, B – German: As–C–H
  • E♭, C, B, A – German: as Es–C–H–A

The first two spell the German name for the town of Asch (now As in the Czech Republic), in which Schumann’s then fiancée, Ernestine von Fricken, was born.The sequence of letters also appears in the German word Fasching, meaning carnival. In addition, Asch is German for “Ash”, as in Ash Wednesday , the first day of Lent. Lastly, it encodes a version of the composer’s name, Robert Alexander Schumann. The third series, S–C–H–A, encodes the composer’s name again with the musical letters appearing in Schumann, in their correct

Portrait of Bach, 1748
Born 21 March 1685 31 March 1685
Eisenach
Died 28 July 1750 (aged 65)
Leipzig

Fantasia and fugue in A minor as is often the case with Bach, little is known about the origins of the piece. It is not even clear whether he intended it for organ, clavichord or harpsichord. In his interview about the work, The Fantasia begins with a series of descending notes in the bass, and descending lines continue to dominate the rest of the piece. The Fugue builds up steadily to a four-part web of harmonies. Then halfway through, there is a chromatically descending line as a second theme, which takes the idea of the descending bass in the Fantasia one step further. And then Bach weaves both themes together to form a rich harmonic whole. Rather than dexterous virtuosity,

Ludwig van Beethoven baptised 17 December 1770 died 26 March 1827
Picture of Beethoven 1820

The three movements of the sonata op 109 :

  1. Vivace ma non troppo — Adagio espressivo
  2. Prestissimo.
  3. Gesangvoll, mit innigster Empfindung. Andante molto cantabile ed espressivo.
Manuscript of Op. 109 (start of the first movement)

The Sonata op 109 is dedicated to Maximiliane Brentano, the daughter of Beethoven’s long-standing friend Antonie Brentano for whom Beethoven had already composed the short Piano Trio in B flat Wo039 in 1812.There is an April entry in Beethoven’s conversation book describing a “small new piece” that is, according to William Meredith, identical to the first movement of Op. 109. In fact, the outline of the movement makes the idea of a Bagatelle interrupted by fantasia-like interludes seem very plausible.Beethoven’s secretary Franz Oliva then allegedly suggested the idea of using this “small piece” as the beginning of the sonata that Schlesinger wanted.The date of the first performance is unknown. The first pianists to undertake bringing Beethoven’s last sonatas, including Op. 109, to public attention were Franz Liszt,who regularly included them in his programs between 1830 and 1840,and Hans von Bulow, who even included several of the late sonatas in one evening.

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