Sandro De Palma in Viterbo A Didone never abandoned

Didone never abandoned Sandro De Palma in Viterbo
Sandro De Palma at Viterbo
A very interesting programme by the distinguished Italian pianist Sandro De Palma for the Tuscia University Series of Prof Ricci in Viterbo in the Auditorium S.Maria in Gradi .
Winner some years ago of the Alfredo Casella International Competition in Naples at the age of only 19.
It was hardly surprising that with the name of Casella to the fore the musical element was foremost in his searching mind for this pianist formed by the renowned school of Vincenzo Vitale

Poster for Carnegie Hall New York 3rd December 2017
A programme that will reach Carnegie Hall in New York on the 3rd December was presented here after an intensive week of recording for the Naxos label.
A week spent recording four of Clementi’s output of almost 113 Sonatas.
Rarely performed ,even Mozart suggested to his sister that she should avoid them because of their difficulty.
We all remember the Gradus ad Parnassum that was part of Clementi’s quite considerable output.
As a fourteen year old boy he was brought to England from Rome by Sir Peter Beckford to advance his studies and provide entertainment for his mentor.
In his thirties he became a renowned publisher ,piano dealer and founder of the Royal Philharmonic Society .
Amongst his pupils were Moscheles and John Field who carried his body to rest in Westminster Abbey at the age of eighty.
Having married three times and with five children he retired to Evesham where he died in 1832.

Mauro Bucitti at work on the Steinway
Sandro De Palma in his researching of unknown piano repertoire had spent a week recording in this hall prior to the recital.
An almost perfect acoustic bringing with him that magician of the piano Mauro Bucitti together with Michael Seberich one of the finest sound engineers with his team from Bolzano.
Mauro Bucitti had infact turned a fine but well used Steinway into an instrument ready for recording .
Turning a bauble into a real gem indeed for the “Didone abbandonata” Sonata op 50 n,3 together with 3 other equally rarely heard sonatas.

Michael Seberich with Sandro De Palma
A programme under the title of” Myths of the Past and Present.Love and death between history and legend”.
Substituting on this occasion Orfeo by the renowned composer and sister in law of the pianist , Silvia Colasanti which requires a reciter ,with Beethoven’s “Tempest” Sonata for solo piano.
A programme that spanned from Orfeo ed Euridice :”The Dance of the Blessed Spirits” through the” Didone Abbandonata” by Clementi and Beethoven’s “Tempest” finishing with Liszt’s great second Ballade based on the story from Ovid of Ero and Leandro.
The story of Leandro swimming across to his lover Ero and due to a storm she not putting out the guiding light , she finds him drowned on the beach in the morning and in desperation throws herself to her death from her tower.
Our own eclectic pianist not only happy with grouping some rarely heard works together he also has all the scores on his I pad which includes all the various editions of the Liszt which he explained has three different endings.
Bagatelles and sketches of Beethoven together with his only Prelude are being collected and studied with an eye to another project to lead on from his present one in progress of Debussy and his times.
An unknown piece by Massenet was one of the encores on this occasion and he tells me he would like now to bring out a recording of all Massenet’s piano works.
Only from the remarkable Leslie Howard and Mark Viner have I heard a pianist with such an intelligently inquisitive mind.

Massenet encore
Not convinced with the Dance of the Spirits in the usual Sgambati arrangement for piano he made his own arrangement of the central part and had an ending more atune to the original that lead so well into the Clementi Sonata.
Some remarkable playing from a pianist renowned for his performances of the Complete Chopin Studies in 1983 at the Michelangeli Festival in Brescia/ Bergamo or the complete Chopin Preludes at his debut recital at the Wigmore Hall in London in 1998.
A career that has taken in the world premiere of Michele Dall’0ngaro’s Piano Concerto at the Bellini Theatre in Catania to many major Festivals including the Folle journee’ di Nantes and the Festival at La Roque d’Antheron.
A mind much too inquisitive to tour the world only as a virtuoso, Sandro has dedicated himself to discovering a vast amount of music still lying dormant.
Some really exquisite sounds in the opening Gluck in which like a real magician he was able to bring our all the subtle strands and colours that this reborn instrument was now capable of transmitting.
Like Cherkassky and the real pianists of the past that have discovered the secret balance that the piano is capable of in the hands of pianists not only with enormous technical equipment but with super sensitive ears that can hear things that would go unnoticed in lesser hands.
”Je sens,j’ecoute, je trasmet” indeed.

Mauro Bucitti
The great “Didone abbandonata” given a Beethovenian performance in which the contrasts were paramount and combined to a forward movement and sense of line that made one wonder why it is not more often heard.
Well the answer was immediately apparent when the master Beethoven spoke.
Here this masterpiece was brought to life by a pianist who was aware of the great contrasts and revolutionary pedalling that Beethoven asks for
Not afraid to arrange some passages to give greater ease pianistically speaking ,something Arrau would never allow ,the first movement in particular was played with great conviction and a passion that held the audience’s attention and indeed his own in a quite extraordinary way.
The ever present I pad but on this occasion there was not even a moment to glance at it such was his total engagement with the spirit of Beethoven.

Sandro De Palma
After that the second movement did not have quite the same propulsion or tension that was so evident before.
The last movement played with all lilting energy that Beethoven in his almost pastoral mood could apply.
The great Liszt Ballade was played with great sense of contrasts but somehow missed the constant pulse that could have made the overall line so apparent and even more gripping.
Some astonishing virtuosity in the parts where the 40 year old Liszt was obviously at the height of his powers taking the world by storm.
A heartrending cantabile leading to the most tumultuous outpourings of bravura of the great theme and then dying away to a whisper at the end.

Auditorium S.Maria in Gradi Viterbo
An encore by Massenet was followed due to great public demand by what was for many the highlight of the recital.
A little sonata by Cimarosa.
It is hardly surprising that he has been awarded the Premio “Cimarosa” for his work in making these gems from this Neapolitan Composer better known.

Christopher Axworthy with Sandro De Palma
Almost Scarlatti like in the rhythmic energy and showing off the now perfect repeating action of this Steinway it was a real lesson in control and finesse as had infact been this entire unforgettable afternoon in Viterbo.
Lucky New York.
Lets hope other capitals will realise what they have been missing.
And above all hats off to Prof. Franco Carlo Ricci for capturing yet again for his series in Viterbo another real eye opener for conossieurs of music making.
The recording for Naxos is now in preparation and the four Clementi Sonatas chosen will appear as soon as the editing process has been achieved.

Sandro de Palma with Prof Ricci

Sandro De Palma transformed with his wife Cecilia Colasanti

The evergreen fascino of Enoch Arden

The evergreen fascino of Enoch Arden Stefano Greco and Tommaso Ragno at S.Cecilia ,Rome
Enoch Arden in Rome still weaves its magic ……..
An entire evening dedicated to Enoch Arden on the occasion of the presentation of a series of paintings by Paolo Giorgi inspired by that great poem of Alfred Lord Tennyson.
A poem that in 1864 sold 70000 copies in only four months and inspired Richard Strauss to compose perhaps the greatest of all Melologos in 1897.
With the voice of Tommaso Ragno and the piano of Stefano Greco we were treated to a performance in the free italian translation of that great man of culture Prof Bruno Cagli.
A standing ovation from one President to another for the rare presence these days of Bruno Cagli,President of Santa Cecilia for 22 years bringing it to world attention taking it into its magnificent new halls designed by Renzo Piano with a historic Orchestra re born under Sir Antonio Pappano.
Michele dall’Ongaro will have his work cut out to follow in such illustrious footsteps.
But as ex director of the Italian Television’s prime culture channel: Rai 5 and a notable composer in his own right he has all the cards possible to bring the greatest performances to a discerning public.
And tonight as Master of Ceremonies he was able to introduce us in his inimitable way to the world of the Melologo.
Passing the microphone to Prof Cesare Scarton,author of the only Italian book on this genre of music theatre.
He was given just ten minutes to give a brief history of this now almost obsolete form of dramatic declamation.
A brilliant and fortunately with the Presidents stop watch ticking away,brief,resume’ of which from Rousseau in 1712 to Schonberg in 1951 has included such composers as Mozart,Schubert,Schumann,Liszt,Wagner,Grieg and of course Richard Strauss.
So seemingly all the cards in order for an enjoyably instructive evening amongst friends.
It is at this point that I was reminded of the story that Paul Tortelier loved to recount about Georges Enescu.
Enescu had asked some friends to listen to one of his violin students in concert and this is what they recounted:
The man playing the piano ,Enescu (renowned mentor of Yehudi Menuhin) should have been playing the violin .
The page turner Alfred Cortot should have been playing the piano
and the prize student should have considered himself lucky to turn pages.
In Torteliers inimitable way of story telling it was unforgettable.
It passed through my mind tonight as we had some beautiful modern paintings that depicted a mermaid type waif in front of a sinking Concordia and seemingly nothing to do with the world of Tennyson’s Enoch;
A magnificent reciter hidden behind two music stands with a radio microphone attached to him which made it rather difficult to declame dramatically as was intended ;
a truly remarkable pianist in front of a magnificent Fabrini Steinway with its voice muted by it being almost totally closed.
An unfair match indeed was to be played out.
But then the magic of Enoch Arden mysteriously filled this rather austerely modern Spazio Risonanze and all the seeming incongruities were forgotten and forgiven in a performance that held the audience riveted from the first waves on the piano to the death of Enoch forty minutes later.
We even looked at those pictures with the eyes of a painter who had been so inspired by this recount that he had overheard one day on the radio

Homage to Lya De Barberiis Martha Noguera al Ghione

Martha Noguera al Ghione Homage to Lya De Barberiis
Wonderful to see that great Steinway back on stage to embrace a great friend of the theatre from its very beginning in 1982.
Lya De Barberiis was one of the first pianists to play on this wonderful Fabrini Steinway,that was purchased especially for the theatre .
She was playing in a series of contemporary music for the publisher Edipan created by Bruno Nicolai.

Guido Agosti after a concert at the Ghione with Lya De Barberiis
Her contemporaries whom she championed with that same seriousness and absolute integrity that we had all learnt from our beloved Maestro Agosti.
Casella,Pizzetti,Malipiero,Dallapiccola,Martucci and her great friend Goffredo Petrassi were among the many that she gave first performances of and many of their works are dedicated to her.

Christopher Axworthy short presentation at the Ghione Theatre
From those first moments the Ghione theatre has passed into history for its celebrated series of concerts for Euromusica.
Artists that have included so many great names neglected or ignored by the great established music societies .
Artist that included in 1984 Vlado Perlemuter,making his debut in Italy at the age of 81,Shura Cherkassky,Gyorgy Sandor,The Tortelier Family,Ruggiero Ricci,Karlheinz Stockhausen,Marylyn Horne,Carlo Bergonzi and a very rare recital by Guido Agosti too just to name a few.
But the artist that created the greatest impression on Lya was the debut after a 30 year absence from the concert stage of Rosalyn Tureck,whose performance of the Goldberg Variations in September 1990 created an earth tremor not only for all those present but also for the rest of Europe where she started to play again.
The High Priestess indeed!
She had not been forgotten.
I had heard Rosalyn Tureck in London playing the “Goldbergs” in one evening at the Royal Festival Hall ,first on the harpsichord and after a long interval on the piano.
An unforgettable performance that I learn years later Martha Noguera was present at too whilst she was having a period of study with that great stylist of her day Ilona Kabos

Ileana Ghione with Rosalyn Tureck in Circeo
I met Lya in Siena for Guido Agosti’s 80th birthday concert.
No party he very seriously specified but he would give a lecture recital on the Debussy Preludes .
What a wonder it was too even if it finished well after midnight.
But the Maestro did agree to a midnight brindisi after his serious work was done and it was here at the Chigiana that I met Lya  for the first time with my wife  .
We had all come to Siena especially to be with the Maestro and his adorable wife Lydia on what was for us at least such an important occasion.
Little did I imagine that we would all spend so much time together immersed in culture in Rome.

Congratulations and serious comment about the nature of work and its rewards from Rosalyn Tureck
Infact it was Lya years later that exclaimed that we should be feted by the state for all that we had done for culture over the years.
In 2001 ” we ” were infact made a Dame by the President of Italy.

22nd May 2005 Duo concert with Lya and my wife in the centre
When in 2000 Lya heard me play in the theatre for a commemoration concert with my wife she decided there and then that this was the that sort of musician she wanted to make music with.
We played all over Italy travelling together when my wife was not on stage.
Ileana adored seeing me in the place where we had met (at the piano) instead of behind the scenes running our theatre business!

Goffredo Petrassi taken by Ileana Ghione at Circeo

Book available from Massimiliano Negri
Our last concert at the Ghione was in 2012 in a concert in memory of our dear friend Goffredo Petrassi at the creation of an Association -” Circolo Culturale Lya De Barberiis”- to promote the music of the composers whom she had so valiantly championed during her long life but also to help bring new young talent to the fore.
All this under the admiring patronage of Gianni Letta.
Created by one of her many students – she would never accept money for teaching by the way – Massimiliano Negri who has since brought out a well researched book” Lya de Barberiis una vita di music nel Novecento italiano”
Lya loved our piano and could not understand why we did not have a proper cover for it  One day a large packet arrived from Hamburg with the cover that still houses the Steinway ……”with love and admiration Lya.”
Much missed, Martha Noguera who was a great friend ,they each frequented each others concerts.
Martha had flown in especially from her home in Buenos Aires to celebrate Lya in three concerts in the places she loved playing in the most: Rome,Sorrento and Viterbo.
Part of an exchange that Lya would have totally endorsed with Martha’s Chopin Festival in Argentina ,now in its 18th year .
Included in this year’s programme was Pablo Rossi one of the greatly admired artists from the Keyboard Charitable Trust,who himself had played at the Ghione when he was just in his teens.
Martha is no stranger to Rome having given a series of concerts in 97 to 99 of the complete works of Chopin and the 32 Sonatas of Beethoven.
A remarkable capacity.
She even told me that she was engaged at the last minute to play the Clara Wieck piano concerto and not being able to find the score in time she learnt the entire concerto from the  Serkin’s recording .
This was some years ago before the advent of internet.

Martha Noguera with Prof Franco Ricci
Finding the score only at the rehearsal she was relieved to know that it was almost perfect.
The same amazing talent as another Ghione artist Ian Hobson who learnt the Horowitz transcription of Stars and Stripes from the recording as the Maestro like Liszt and Thalberg kept his secrets up his sleeve.
Someone from his University in USA sent it to the Maestro and was surprised to have a reply from the devil himself: ” Not Bad” !
And so it was hardly surprising to find the theatre packed out on a very rainy Sunday evening in Rome for this long overdue homage to a great lady.
It was hardly surpring too that the finest performance was the last work on a long and varied programme .
The Sonata n.1 op 22 by Ginastera an Argentinian compatriot of Martha with whom she had discussed this very work.

Sergio Calligaris in the Green Room with Martha Noguera
From 1952 in his “Subjective Nationalism” period in the Gauchesco tradition .
A gaucho being a landless native horseman of the plains and is a symbol of Argentina.
A superlative performance that Martha even had the energy to describe to us in Ginastera’s own words in the Green Room after the concert .

Rosalyn Tureck and Ileana Ghione in Circeo
Wonderful sense of colour allied to a rhythmic energy that never relented even in the Presto misterioso somewhat reminiscent of the last movement of Chopin’s B flat minor Sonata .
Such beautiful sounds in the Adagio molto appassionato and such unrelenting sense of movement and real virtuosity in the Allegro marcato and Ruvido ed ostinato.
Throughout the concert one had been aware of her great sense of line and real sense of balance that allowed the piano to sing in such a natural way.
Particularly ideal for the “little” Schubert A major sonata op posth 120.
The opening Allegro moderato allowed to sing as if one of the composers sublime songs . A great sense of style and even if some details were occasionally blurred one was always aware of being in the presence of a true musician.
The charming last movement thrown off sometimes with a little too much liberty and ease followed a slow movement of rare beauty.
The Chopin Polonaise Fantasie given a full blown performance in which the key word was Fantasie sometimes at the price of sacrificing the true line and rhythm of the Polonaise in what could almost be considered the “old tradition” of the Chopin stylist that Pollini via Rubinstein has long eliminated .
However it was a very convincing heartfelt performance as a whole and was played with all the passion and verve of a musician half her age .

Sergio Calligaris and Ornella Cogliolo in the Green Room
The Haydn and Beethoven E flat Sonatas :n.59 Hob XV1:49 and op 81a “Les Adieux” were given stylish performances of a simplicity in which the beauty of sound was paramount.
A very clear pulse to the opening Haydn was sometimes betrayed by the freedom she gave to the more virtuosistic passages .
The slow movement unfolded in a very spacious manner and the contrast with the middle section was very passionately conveyed.
Always perfectly in style the last movement was played with all the charm and grace that made this “little” Haydn E flat a perfect opening and preparation for the only Sonata that Beethoven himself actually gave a title .
Prefacing the three movements :Farewell;Absence;Return , Beethoven’s “Les Adieux was vividly depicted in a performance of great intelligence .
In particular notable for the beauty of the melodic line in the second movement and the nervous forward motion of the Return.
No encores were possible after such a tumultuous performance of Ginastera and it was nice to note such distinguished musicians in the audience.Prof Franco Carlo Ricci,
Maestro Cerroni, Pieralberto Biondi,Signora Martinelli Cafaro,Sergio Calligaris,Ornella Cogliolo,Avvocato Ambrosio all present to pay homage to an extraordinary artist despite a deluge in Rome that has not been seen for quite sometime.
📷📷

Alessandro Taverna at the Filarmonica

Alessandro Taverna at the Filarmonica
Alessandro Taverna at the Filarmonica Romana for their Beethovenklavier series
I have only been able to attend two of these memorable concerts that Matteo D’Amico ,the Artistic Director of the Filarmonica Romana,has dedicated to the Pinnacle of the piano repertoire:The 32 Sonatas of Beethoven.
Giving the stage to some of the most remarkable pianists of their generation and all Italian too.
Not content with this, as a notable composer in his own right ,he has included a piano work by contemporary Italian composers in each programme.
All these concerts recorded for the RAI for future broadcast including a brief but sometimes illuminating talk by the composers themselves.
The recitals  are under the eagle eye of Andrea Lucchesini ,the director of the famous Academy in Fiesole,and a very distinguished pianist in his own right.
I well remember Cherkassky when I took him to play in Empoli,Busoni’s birthplace,being invited to Luciano Berio’s house nearby to hear his protege Andrea Lucchesini play.
Cherkassky was very impressed and that young boy has since gone on to have a very distinguished career never forgetting in turn to help his younger colleagues.
Much in the same vein as his teacher Maria Tipo.
There is certainly something in the hills around Florence that is conducive to great pianists.
All the concerts in the Sala Casella ,part of the beautiful Villa which is the seat of the Filarmonica .
Is it just a coincidence that the Casella edition of the Beethoven Sonatas was for many years the bible for young pianists ?
The bust of his hands was recently bequeathed to the Filarmonica by that great,much missed Italian pianist Lya De Barberiis also champion of so many Italian contemporary composers.
Her memorable lecture recital in this very hall for her 90th birthday a few years ago has become a benchmark for all those interested in the Italian composers of that period.
My previous visit was to hear that great stylist Leonora Armellini and today it was the turn of Alessandro Taverna fast being recognised as one of the finest interpreters of his day especially of contemporary music.
Interesting to note that both have been chosen to perform for the Keyboard Charitable Trust of London founded by a disciple of Benedetti Michelangeli,Noretta Conci-Leech.
Hats of to the composer Matteo D’Amico because for me the highlight of the recital today was the contemporary piece by the composer Michele dall’Ongaro.
President in his own right of the Accademia di S.Cecilia and director of RAI 5 the cultural station like BBC 4 in the UK .
His only piece for solo piano written in 1989 as he very amusingly decribed the five “brief” scenes that make up his “Autodafe'”.
Explaining that everything of any importance has already been done by Beethoven and so anything that composers  could offer today had in some way already been contemplated by Beethoven.
But he said the greatest joy for a composer was to be alone in a darkened room with a pencil and manuscript paper to turn his fantasy into sound.
He certainly did that in these varied pieces describing the jouney to the scaffold!
Amazing sounds from the piano played with such conviction by Alessandro Taverna.
He did not break a string in the final piece as the composer had recommended but as a true master of the piano played with the same vehemence that was required.
In fact it was even more remarkable for the contrast that he found .
The floating sounds of the fourth piece “rassegnato” and the contrasts in the first piece “riluttante” all played with an enviable clarity and precision but with a fantasy that made  the composers own images so immediately apparent.
The three Sonatas op 27 n.1 “quasi una fantasia “;op 53 “Waldstein”;op 110.
All three sonatas played with the rigour for which this young man is renowned and duly feted by Lorin Maazel ,who on hearing him at his festival in Castleton,USA for the KCT,immediatley engaged him to play together with his Munchner Philharmoniker.
A Beethoven in which the great contrasts that are so much part of Beethoven’s character were immediately apparent.
The virtuoso demands in the Waldstein were played with a mastery that did not deny either the struggle that is within and is the very essence of this sonata.
The short slow movement (Andante Favori that was the original mouvement was published separately ) was a beautiful introduction to Rondo’-Allegretto moderato where the bell like melody entered so gently on a cloud of sound before the very energetic eruptions. The first movement played at just the right tempo that allowed the second subject to make such a telling contrast, without a change of tempo ,with the rhythmic rumble with which the movement begins.
Infact it was this sense of line that was so apparent in the penultimate Sonata op 110.
This seemingly Pastoral Sonata that is sometimes so difficult to perceive as a whole was here given an exemplary reading.
Eventually some of the magical sounds that had sparked his fantasy in the contemporary piece he will add to his notable intellectual musicianship that gave such a sense of architectural line to this masterpiece where Beethovens rage was turning into something so much simpler and profound as in the works that follow op.111,126 and the great Diabelli op120.
The companion sonata to the more famous “Moonlight” was played with all the simplicity and rhythmic energy that brought this once much neglected sonata to life.
Hats off to the Filarmonica and Matteo D’Amico for promoting Beethoven, the finest young Italian musicians as well as contemporary Italian composers .
Matteo D’Amico who wrote the score many years ago for me to play in Orazio Costa’s famous edition of Pirandello “Cosi e’ se vi pare” with my wife the renowned actress and impresario Ileana Ghione.

Jayson Gillham at Conway Hall

Jayson Gillham at Conway Hall Romantic Bach for the Bloomsbury Festival
Jayson Gillham at Conway Hall.
The Bloomsbury Festival Romantic Bach from the intimate to epic on the modern piano………………Sunny Jason outshone them all tonight
Very interesting for a Londoner like me to discover a new venue for classical music. Conway Hall like Regent Hall has always for me had the sound of the Salvation Army and not a concert hall.
I remember Madame Tillett determined to have a hall in the centre of London and not accept the rather cold Queen Elisabeth Hall on the Southbank .
She opened a new hall in Regents street ,paid to have it refurbished and opened with a season of all of her roster of stars from Segovia and Szeryng to a complete Beethoven Series with Badura Skoda.
Coffee served in real china cups but nothing could make the hall feel like a real concert hall. It may have well been the carpets and plush seats.
This is certainly not the case of Conway Hall as I discovered at Jayson Gillham’s recital for the Bloomsbury Festival.
An Art Deco type building in the corner of Red Lion Square in Holborn.
It has a very well worn feeling inside that fits like a friendly glove .
Wood everywhere gives a very warm feeling in particular to the sound from their fine Boesendorfer piano .
The hall was infact purpose built for concerts in 1929 when the South Place Ethical Society acquired the concert series from the People’s Concert Society of 1878.
Four hundred comfortable but certainly not plush seats,no carpets in sight to hinder the near perfect acoustic of this wooden interior.
Just the right amount of resonance to allow the Majestic Boesendorfer to ring out maybe even a little too overpowering at times.
Jayson Gillham is fast becoming an important part of those magnificent Australian musicians that live and work in and around London as well as in their native Australia. Piers Lane and Leslie Howard are both renowned for their enormous musical appetite and their intellectual and musicianly mastery of the piano.
Having graduated from the RAM in London under that renowned pedagogue Christopher Elton. Jayson Gillham has gone on to take first prize in 2014 at the Montreal International Music Competition.
Since then he has played with many of the world’s leading orchestras and conductors.
A real thinking musician in the mold of his illustrious colleagues it was his informal introductions that were so stimulating and informative in this well thought out recital under the title of :”Romantic Bach from initmate to epic on the modern piano”.
As he stated in the introduction :Bach was the undisputed master of Counterpoint- the art of setting independent musical lines against each other and interweaving them to create harmony (just the harmonic inevitability that Murray Perahia so eloquently demonstrated in his Masterclass at Milton Court last week)
The complexity with which Bach could compose in this manner is to this day unmatched,and the resulting beauty and depth of emotion of Bach’s music is immense. “From the intimate to the epic” was all in a day’s work for Bach,who dedicated his life’s work to God.
The Toccatas in G major and C minor opening the first and second half of original and trascriptions of J.S. Bach.
Full blooded performances never afraid of the pianos sonorities but always contained within an architectural framework which is the very substance of Bach’s genius.
Some beautiful contrasts made one almost think that these are just as powerful as some of the overblown transcriptions of Busoni.
The C minor Toccata in particular played with crystalline clarity and an energy that swept us along to the very last note.
The same rigour that he brought to the Chaconne from the violin Partita n.2 in Dminor in perhaps the greatest of all transcriptions of Bach that of Busoni.
Of course a use of the piano and of great virtuosity but never sacrificing this masterpiece written as part of a series of dances .
As Jayson so clearly stated a masterwork as long as all the other movements of the Partita put together.
Played with an unusual and very original ,refreshing and unrhetorical look at the score. A much maligned work in the piano repertoire here Jayson restored it to the masterwork that it most clearly is.
On a par with that of Bach?He almost convinced me!
Bach’s original Prelude and Fugues in C sharp minor Bk.2 and B flat minor Bk 1 so much more powerful than the rather overblown transcription by Rachmaninov of the Suite in E major.
So many extra notes it really became a suite by Rachmaninov with references to Bach! Beautifully played,the Gavotte had a charm and lilt and just the right amount of virtuosity in the Gigue was quite overwhelming in Jayson’s hands.
It was interesting to hear the Prelude in E minor by Rachmaninov’s teacher Alexander Siloti . Not quite the magical B minor that is most often played and there is also the doubt that this too was not an original work of Bach at all!
Dazzling is the only way to describe his performance of Nun freut euch,lieben Christen g’mein in Busoni’s busy transcription .I doubt Busoni himself could have matched that.
His Jesu Joy of Man’s desiring in the Myra Hess transcription was of such beauty that one never wanted it to stop.
Transcendental piano playing in Liszt’s very unfussy and respectful Prelude and Fugue in A minor .
Astounding left hand octaves brought the first half to a breathtaking ending
I was thinking how strange that an Australian pianist should play Egon Petri’s transcription of ” Sheep may safely Graze” .Even though beautifully shaped it did not have the same magic as Percy Grainger’s transcription that Jayson surprised us with as an encore.
Indeed as he pointed out Grainger not content with Bach’s title gave his ramble on “Sheep may safely graze” the title of Blithe Bells. Played as to the manner born . The colours and sounds that now lit up the piano showed us all the magic and fantasy that had up until now been hidden in Jayson’s intellectual and masterly performances.
It was as though he could let his hair down as Grainger obviously was doing and enter a fantasy world of sound that even Bach could not have imagined possible.

Julian Jacobson 70th Birthday Series at St John’s Smith Square

Julian Jacobson’s 70th Birthday Series at St John’s Smith Square
Julian Jacobson at St John`s Smith Square
The first of four concerts to celebrate Julian Jacobson’s 70th Birthday year.
Concerts that include the three “war” sonatas of Prokofiev and some of the major works from the piano repertoire.
I was much reminded of that remarkable musician Frederick Jackson .
“Freddie” as he was affectionately known could sit down and play the Goldberg or Diabelli Variations as he could conduct the Verdi Requiem.
I first met Julian thirty years ago when he came to Rome to perform in a contemporary music festival in my theatre in collaboration with the American Academy in Rome.
There was talk of him coming to give a recital with Ida Handel and Zara Nelsova but it was not to be and so I met him again only last year when he was taking over the chairmanship of the Beethoven Society from the retiring Dr Malcom Troup .
I together with Piers Lane and Noretta Conci-Leech were invited to judge their annual Beethoven Competition which was won by Mihai Ritivoiu with a remarkable performance of the “Appassionata” as you would expect from a prize student of Joan Havill.
And so I was very keen to hear Julian again especially as I had heard about his cycle of the 32 Beethoven Sonatas played in the same day in aid of charity WaterAid.
I also knew of his many other activities at the RCM and for the Beethoven Society.
A real musician as you would expect from a young boy at the age of seven studying piano and composition with the Lamar Crowson and Arthur Benjamin.
A graduate of Queen’s College Oxford and student later of Louis Kentner .
I was intrigued to see a CD on sale of the works of Maurice Jacobson who on reading the cover learn was Julian’s father.
A very distinguished musician in his own right, a child prodigy who could play the “48” and “32” from memory at the age of 16!
A fine accompanist he was to discover Kathleen Ferrier and went on to found the National Youth Orchestra of Great Britain with Dame Ruth Railton.
Director and chairman of the publisher J.Curwen and Sons with an impressive 450 works to his name.
He was also founder , I was told, of The Chopin Society UK.
He was awarded an OBE in 1971 and died in 1976 at the age of 80.
On the same table a CD of the complete piano works of Balakirev and some of Julians compositions which include The Orang-U-Tango written for the Martha Argerich Festival .
Only three great works on his first programme as you would expect with such a pedigree:
Beethoven “Eroica” variations op 35 , Schubert’s first set of Four Impromptus D 899 Prokofiev 6th Sonata in A 82.
Never a harsh sound from this musician who was listening intently to the great line of these masterworks that he was sharing with us.
The great Beethovenian interruptions in the Eroica Variations played with all the vehemence that made the contrast with the simple theme so telling.
If there were some blurred edges it did not in anyway detract from the overall picture that was so much part of this musician’s vision and wish to guide us through.
Beautiful almost whispered sound after the Beethovenian opening of Schubert’s first Impromptu .
The similarity between the opening of the Beethoven was even more striking for its direct unfussy approach to the composers intentions.
Many beautiful things in the following impromptus especially the 3rd Impromptu where the melody was allowed to sing out in such a natural unmannered way.
The jeu perle in the second and fourth Impromptu played with an enviable precision and it was good to notice this pianist’s “paws” the same ones I used to admire so much in “Freddie” who I mentioned above.
A pianist’s hand that seems to always be drawn to the keyboard without any fuss or affectation in many ways an organist’s hand too and allow us to follow unimpeded the composers intentions.
Enormous contrasts in the Prokofiev as though Julian was trying to show us the reasoning behind this first sonata of his “war” trilogy.
Here a slightly clearer articulation would have given even more rhythmic impetus to this astonishing sonata.
The long slow movement seemed so logical in it’s projection of the long melodic line.
If the last movement could have been even more steely fingered it was played in a fearless way that brought the concert to tumultuous finish
.
A rarely heard Scriabin Prelude in B minor played with all the colour and calm but always with the same sense of line and direction that had been so much the hallmark of a real musicians recital.
The next recital on the 26th November in which another three blocks from the piano repertoire Schubert D850,Beethoven op 27 n.2 and Prokofievs 7th Sonata.
A remarkable tour de force indeed for someone who is so much involved in every aspect of musical life ……..
It is evidently a family trait!

Andrei Iliushkin at St Martins for the Beethoven Piano Society of Europe and The Worshipful Company of Musicians

Andrei Iliushkin at St Martin in the Fields for The Beethoven Piano Society of Europe and The Worshipful Company of Musicians
Andrei Iliushkin at St Martin in the Fields ,winner of the Intercollegiate Beethoven Piano Society of Europe Competition and Winner of the Worshipful Company of Musicians Beethoven Medal
All in the family you might say today.
Andrei Iliushkin having completed his early studies in Moscow has been studying for the past four years at the RAM with the renowned teacher Christopher Elton ,disciple as we all were in that period of our dearly beloved Gordon Green.
The Worshipful Company of Musicians was founded in 1350 and the Beethoven Piano Society of Europe has as its International President Paul Badura Skoda and as Honorary UK President Sir Andras Schiff so it was a decided honour for a young pianist of only 22 to be recognised by such noble institutions .
Julian Jacobson the chairman of the Beethoven society and Alberto Portugheis founder member together with Andrew Morris and many other distinguished colleagues were present today for the winners recital and presentation of the Beethoven Medal.
Three works in the programme which showed off ever facet of this young man’s remarkable talent. Bach/Busoni Chaconne,Beethoven Sonata in E minor op 90 and Scriabin’s 3rd Sonata.
It was immediately apparent from the first notes of the Chaconne the intelligence and musicality that was allied to his complete control of the piano.
Obviously early training in Moscow has given him a security and sense of dynamic control that can only come from this early preparation.
Fingers of steel and wrists of rubber Agosti used to say.
But fingers of steel that allow you to play with more colours and dynamic range ,never hitting the piano but caressing the sounds that are there to be found .
He brought a great nobility to the Chaconne thinking always from the bass upwards as indeed he did in the other two works in the programme.
Not afraid to take liberties with the tempo where his personality thought it necessary but never loosing sight of the great architectural line that Bach designs so masterly for solo violin and which Busoni is able to transform in an almost equally masterly way for the piano .
His great range of dynamics brought this work into the realm of the modern piano but never forgetting its origin.
The tranquillo middle section played with a delicacy and clarity.
The seemingly violin like texture played with a precision leading to a tumultuous climax that gave way to a heart rending calm -quasi tromboni writes Busoni – but rarely have I heard such beautiful trombones as today.
An equally delicate calm before the storm in the Piu sostenuto and piu espressivo leading inexorably to the great climax and final triumphant statement of the Chaconne .
Agosti would have had a fit to hear the great bass notes played as canons.
They are marked staccato and are there just give more sonority to the great final statement of the theme.
It is a trick of the great pianists especially of the past that playing in great halls they would add very judiciously bass notes that would allow the sonority of the piano to carry across the vast opera houses where they would often be expected to play to their doting public.
Nelson Freire still does this to great effect and I remember him playing a very subtle bass note before the entry in the treble of the piano in Chopin’s Second Concerto.
Tricks of the Trade my old piano teacher Sidney Harrison used to call them and indeed they are .
But if you are playing in public you must also sometimes be a showman.
Rubinstein and Horowitz were of course the prime examples in my day.
Before them there was Rachmaninov,Rosenthal,Lhevine ,Godowsky etc in the Golden era of Romantic piano playing of which Busoni in a certain sense was part of.
It all of course was born with the greatest showman ever Franz Liszt.
Busoni was a disciple of Liszt as Agosti was a disciple of Busoni .
This was an impressive opening for Andrei and confirmed his credentials as the just winner of the honours that were bestowed on him at the end of a very revealing programme.
Beethoven’s beautiful little E minor Sonata op 90- the calm before the storm you might say.
Perhaps the most Schubertian of all Beethoven’s Sonatas was given here a loving performance .
The beautiful second movement entering almost unnoticed as indeed it does in the last movement of Schubert’ s great A major Sonata.
This is of course Beethoven and the great contrasts were very clearly marked with great rhythmic clarity.
Rarely have I heard the left hand semiquavers in the first movement played so clearly without pedal allowing the legato right hand to be so telling.
The great delicacy in the middle section somewhat reminiscent of the opening of Liszt’s great tone poem Vallee d’Oberman.And the gentle disintegration of the first movement disolving into the Nicht zu geschwind und sehr singbar vorgetragen.
The Third Sonata by Scriabin was given a very fine performance indeed.
His sense of colour and inner rhythmic propulsion allowed the hypnotic opening motif to spring to life in all its multitude of forms as if by magic.
The long slow movement played with a great sense of line and the rhythmic impulse in the last movement and heroic statement of the main theme brought this sonata and the recital to a magnificent conclusion.

Mastery at St Mary’s Rokas Valuntonis

The Master Speaks Rokas Valuntonis at St Mary’s
Rokas Valuntonis at St Mary`s Perivale.
Sensational performances by a master pianist.
It was a very pleasant surprise to hear this charming young man from Lithuania for the first time.
I had met him at a private concert in the house of that renowned pianist Norma Fisher but had never had a chance to hear him until now.
I introduced him to Hugh Mather at a concert in Perivale.
Hugh listened to a “you tube” performance of his Mozart/ Volodos Turkish March and immediately invited him to play in his remarkable season at St Mary’s.
And so it was yesterday that Rokas Valuntonis gave a short Tuesday afternoon recital at St Mary’s.
I was surprised to see an old RAM friend Peter Bithell there too as well as many other remarkable young musicians including Andrew Yiangou
Word has obviously got around that we have a major new talent in our midst.
In fact a Pogorelich type with that most remarkable technique to match ears that can hear and project sounds that most others never reach.
Together with an extraordinary digital precision and clarity that is of the world of the young Pogorelich or Arcadi Volodos.
He graduated in Lithuania and at the Sibelius Academy in Helsinki.
He has had guidance in Paris from Eugen Indjic ,a top prize winner in the first Rubinstein Competition together with Emanuel Ax and Janina Fialkowska ,and a very remarkable musician that we were privileged to hear in London recently thanks Lady Rose Cholmondeley at the Chopin Society.
Like all great artists,having won many major competitions and performed a great deal in Europe he is still searching for musical stimulation and guidance which he is now receiving at the Guildhall under that remarkable musician Peter Bithell.
He could not do better for Peter was the finest pianist of my generation.
A top prize winner at an early age in the Busoni , Casella and Santader competitions
A real thinking musician with an impeccable musical pedegree starting with Harold Craxton and finishing with Maria Curcio taking in Guido Agosti and Gordon Green.
He is now a highly esteemed professor at the Guildhall and at the Summer Academy in Bloomington USA.
A charming presentation showed all his acute intelligence and wit.
Thanking Hugh for the opportunity to give his first concert in the UK and having seen the beautiful antique church where the concert was to take place he immediately thought of a programme of suitably sombre respectful music by Bach .
But then he had an after thought and decided to dedicate it rather impishly to the Devil . After all there would be no Heaven without Hell!
Hence the inclusion of Liszt Mephisto and Gounod Faust Paraphrase.
Ending of course by great demand with the Turkish March.
The concert began with three rarely heard Scarlatti Sonatas. K487,K.8,K 79. in which one was struck by the precision and carity of his touch.
Never a harsh sound but just the right rhythmical energy and quite considerable temperament that can turn these gems into living sounds weaving their thread so simply and inevitably .
A sparing use of pedal made the contrast even more gripping in the middle slow sonata K.8.Played with such liquidity of sound and sense of subtle colour and shaping one was reminded of the miraculous Scarlatti performances of Horowitz.
Never the dry accademic approach but a very respectful one that brought the music alive using dicreetely all the possibilities of an instrument that the composer could only have imagined in his dreams.
The four early mazukas op 6 by Chopin were played to the manner born.
Here one was immediately made aware of the bagpipe sounds and rhythms of Chopin’s native land that he was describing in these miniature masterpieces.
And so for a really devilish performance indeed of Liszt’s famous Mephisto Waltz n.1.
Here again one was aware of the acute attention to sound and detail in a breathtaking performance ranging from transcendental virtuosity to heatrending cantabile.
The subtle use of the pedal and his very sense of searching out all the range of sounds and colours that rarely we hear these days of barnstorming pianism.
Rarely if ever have I heard this good but not remarkable Yamaha piano be transformed into a Pandora’s box full of magical sounds and excitement in the hands of this master magician.
Of course this is what make the piano such a much loved instrument a true orchestra in the right hands, and why all the greatest composers from Bach onwards have been able to create their masterpieces for an instrument that inspires so much love.
It is in large part due to a sense of balance and the ability to convince us that this is not only a percussion instrument where hammers are hitting strings but an instrument that is capable of a true legato and a kaleidoscopic range of sounds.
This is what technique really means and this is what is so rare where a majority of pianists aim to play as fast and as loud as they can with scrupulous attention to the composers written indications.
The pianos these days can take it.
Our ears cannot !
In order to bring the composers indications to life you have to understand the intention and real meaning behind the notes and have intelligence allied to a total command of the instrument to begin the search for the style, colour and feeling in the notes.
“Words without thought no more to Heaven go” as Boulanger loved to quote from Shakespeare.
Of course but words are not enough there is even more within the notes for he who has the talent and dedication to search within.
That is the real interpreter and it is very rare these days.
The example for me today are Murray Perahia and Krystian Zimerman.
It is hardly surprising that their mentors were Vladimir Horowitz and Arthur Rubinstein!
The Sonetto del Petrarca n.123 fared less well as Rokas’s search for colour and sound, remarkable though it was, did not allow us to follow the line.
Somehow we lost the thread as infact he momentarily did too.
Wood for the trees in this case in a recital that had been of an authority and assurance of few.
No outward signs of exuberance or showmanship as can be in this music of Liszt the greatest showman ever.
With his complete concentration on the sounds that he was producing it was all in the sounds that he was transmitting to his very attentive audience.
Entering into the real style for which this music was written he was never afraid to add the odd bass note or fill in very subtly some of Liszt’s intricate meanderings around Gounod’s Faust .
“Je sens ,Je trasmet” not sure who wrote that but it is exactly what went on today.
Rokas had written a Paraphrase of   Lithuanian folk song especially for today’s concert
 As he said .His op.1
He had given the title for the programme knowing that the incentive would make him actually finish the piece.
Full of nostalgia for his Lithuania in the recurring opening motif repeated after some glistening arpeggios reminiscent of the Tchaikowsky transcriptions of that other great vituoso of our day Mikhail Pletnev
Sensational is the only word that can describe the performance of Mozart’s famous Turkish March in the paraphrase that Arcadi Volodos has made of it .
Such ease,charm,sumptuous sounds and teasingly infectuous virtuosity it just brought tears to ones eyes for the sheer perfection that was on show.
An audience held spellbound and absolutley incredulous .
Dear Hugh Mather you were right as always but you are going to have a hard job to follow that !
Many thanks to you and your faithful public for welcoming Rokas to London.
We have been waiting a long time!
After that what could be better than a magical performance of the Barber of Seville in Jonathan Miller’s famous production conducted by old friend Hilary Griffiths .
Having conducted many of the major opera companies in the world making his debut in London at last at the ENO

Mishka Rushdie Momen at St Mary’s

The Bells of St Mary’s Mishka Rushdie Momen
Mishka Rushdie Momen at St Mary`s Perivale This must be London`s best kept secret.
A wonderful meal in a comfortably civilised Farmhouse Inn.
Eat as much as you like ~ or can!~for under ten pounds.
Scrupulously clean with attentive caring young personnel.
The same caring people who surround Felicity and Hugh Mather,both doctors sharing their love of music and providing the ideal conditions and opportunity to perform for some of the most talented up and coming young musicians in London.
Three or four concerts a week in St Mary`s Tuesday at 14h,Wednesday at 19.30 and Sunday at 15h. And at the sister church of St Barnabas on Friday at 13h.
Each concert professionally video recorded and every artist paid a performing fee.
Hugh was passing around a Questionnaire Survey on how they could improve.
Improve on that dear Hugh not on this earth!
Today after a sumptuous Sunday roast we were treated to the exquisite playing of Mishka Rushdie Momen .
Her Uncle is the famous writer Salman Rushdie.
As Hugh explained she has been playing for his series regularly since that first concert as part of the Purcell School when she was only 16.
Now 9 years later still only in her mid twenties she has received accolades from some of the finest musician pianists of our age.
Having studied with Joan Havill and Imogen Cooper at the Guildhall and periodically with Richard Goode she has attracted the attention of Sir Andras Schiff.
Not only inviting her to his Masterclasses in Gstaad but also to play in his “Building Bridges” Series offering her recitals in New York,Zurich,Antwerp, Germany and Italy.
In fact her superb sense of balance and legato allied to an exquisitely​ intelligent musicality that allows the music to speak so naturally reminds me of the fourteen year old Schiff studying with us in the class of the much missed Andre Tchaikowsky in Dartington fifty years ago.
The wondrous sense of legato in Chopin`s 3rd Ballade was the envy of us all!
A musicians programme played like the consummate musician she is.
The finest performance for me today were the “Ghost” variations WoO24 by Schumann. In fact one of Schumann`s last works on a theme that came to the dying composer sent by the Angels.
The same theme that was used in his violin concerto discovered long after his death by Menuhin .
In fact it was in a seance in 1933 that Joachims two grand nieces Jelly d’Aranyi and Adila Fachiri were directed to the Prussian State Library where Joachim had left the manuscript saying it should not be played for 100 years.
As the copyright was German property the first performance was given by Georg Kulenkampff and the Berlin Philharmonic on 26th November 1937.
Menuhin gave the second performance at Carnegie Hall in the violin and piano version on 6th December that year.
Jelly d’Aranyi ( dedicatee of Ravel Tzigane) gave the first London performance with the BBC Philharmonic in Queens Hall.
The same theme used by Brahms too for his Variations on a theme by Schumann.
The composer tried to commit suicide by jumping off a bridge into the Rhine but was saved in time and managed to finish these very delicate variations that his adored Clara kept locked in her drawer for many years after his death a short while later.
That great musician Menahem Pressler has taken them into his repertoire in his 90`s.
In fact they are very much twilight musings of sublime beauty.
Playing from the score ,this work that is new to Mishka`s repertoire was a sort of work in progress.
I can not wait to hear the work when it is fully absorbed into her mind and soul.
Some wonderful sounds in which this heaven sent melody was allowed to sing no matter how intricate its surrounds.
A feat of great artistry in which art conceals art.
The same artistry which allowed the two Albeniz pieces from Iberia “El Puerto” and “Triana” to sing in such a joyous sunny way.
Never having to force the tone ,she was able to find the ideal sheen of the land of sun and manyana.
The Mozart Rondo in A minor found an ideal interpreter where the innocent Rondo theme appeared with all the innocence pregnant with meaning that makes Mozart`s quality rather than quantity so hard for the interpreter.
“Too easy for children but too difficult for adults” according to Schnabel.
“You are a musician not a pianist” said Leschetizky of his pupil Schnabel.
What greater compliment could one receive indeed?
The Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue in D minor BWV 903 opened the programme.
The Fantasia I found a bit too fragmented but then with the recitativos she seemed to bring the fragments together bringing the fantasia to an unusually moving ending before embarking on the fugue played with great clarity and sense of line.
The final work in this full Sunday afternoon recital programme to a sold out hall was Schumann’s great Sonata in F sharp minor op 11.
This is a very long and difficult work and was played with all the sense of shape and colour necessary but missed the sense of passionate urgency and almost operatic showmanship that was so much part of Annie Fischer’s historic performances .
In fact it was the last work that Annie Fischer played in my theatre in Rome and she followed it with the most nakedly passionate performance of L’Isle Joyeuse.
The opening is pure opera but it also leads into the Allegro and this sense of forward drive was missing in an extremely musical account where the actual almost savage spirit was denied.
One needs great reserves to be able to play this work as a Fischer or a Gilels otherwise it can sound like a series of beautiful episodes without any great architectural line.
In fact the middle section in the last movement was sublime as was the beautiful Aria today.
Let us not forget though that Schumann broke his fingers in trying to improve his technique and his works are of transcendental difficulty because they must sound as though there are always infinite reserves available.
After an afternoon of such wonderful music making no encore was possible so we passed immediately to the tea and homemade cakes which is all part of the Sunday afternoon St Mary’s ritual.
Felicity at the helm in the kitchen and Hugh playing host to his enchanted guests.

Jamal Aliyev and Maria Tarasewicz at the 1901 Arts Club

Swan Song in Paradise Jamal Aliyev and Maria Tarasewicz at the 1901 Arts Club
JamalAliyev and Maria Tarasewicz at the 1901 Arts Club for Chanan Canan Maxton`s Talent
Unlimited
Sold out 1901 Arts Club for the recital by Jamal Aliyev fast making a name for himself as one of the finest cellist of his generation.
Already having won every award from the RCM where he studies with Thomas Carroll having previously studied with him from an early age at the Menuhin School .
This year has seen his Proms debut as well as being solist only a few days ago at the RFH with the Philharmonia .
Selected to be one of YCAT’s prestigious young artists he has already recorded his first CD of Russian Masters to great acclaim on the Champs Hill label .
His debut in the 2018 Enescu Festival at the Atheneum in Bucharest will be broadcast live by Medici.
He still finds time for his Masters degree,a three year course which he has just embarked on this autumn at the RCM.
Winner of the Arts Club- Sir Karl Jenkins Award he appeared in this delightfully secluded oasis in the centre of London with the magnificent pianist Maria Tarasewicz with whom he has shared the platform for the past few years.
This house just off Waterloo is inspired by the Salon Culture in Europe with beautifully decorated rooms designed to re- create the initimate ambiance of a private residence.
As the critics have noted:
” Walking past,you probably wouldn’t guess there was a recital room here. Truly lovely hosts,nineteenth century salon vibe and bar upstairs, Check it out ,its a real gem”
And “gems ” there were indeed last night in a varied recital from Bach to Shchedrin.
This may very well be their swan song together for Jamal now being a YCAT artist where birds of a feather are expected to flock together!
Promoted for the past three years by the indefatigable Canan Maxton and her Talent Unlimited,which promotes and oversees the early stages of the careers of exceptionally talented young artists.
I have heard these two young artists together in these past three years many times but tonight as talented artists with the right guidance can do,there was a maturity and authority added to their passionate total commitment to the music.
Starting on his own Jamal gave great weight and authority to the magnificent opening Prelude of the Solo Cello Suite n.3 in Cmajor BWV1009.
A great opening statement that filled this hall with the glorious sounds of his 1756 Giovanni Battista Gabrielli.
The 45 people privileged to be present knew immediately that here was an artist to be reckoned with indeed.
Great sense of dance in the Allemande was followed by a Courante that I found ran too fast for comfort to allow the music to unfold naturally as in the Bouree and Gigue that followed.
The Sarabande of course was sublime indeed as a contrast to the Courante.
As with all great artists everything falls into place and he almost convinced me that the contrast between the Courante and the Sarabande was right in the end!
I wish he could have abandoned the score as he did later in the programme to give him all the freedom that his innate musicianship and intelligence demand .
In fact a free reign like a throughbread free to roam in the wonderland that Bach sets before us.
Following with the Rococo Variations by Tchaikowsky in which Maria Tarasewicz joined forces with him in a sumptuous performance played with all the passion and fire that comes only with youth.
Abandoning the score this time Jamal was free to allow the music to pour out of him directly via the magnificent sounds of his cello which he imbued with a great sense of weight even in the most subtle cantabile passages .
His faithful orchestra filling in with all the colours and sounds of a symphony orchestra.
It lead to a very exciting exchange between solist and orchestra which was greeted by an ovation from this very attentive audience.
During the interval we were invited by our host to see the terrace on the floor above the intimate salon and bar where I was able to meet many of Jamal and Maria’s admirers and friends.
It is that sort of place.
I even encountered Jamal and Maria on the narrow staircase and of course they asked me if I would turn pages for the rather complicated Chopin Sonata for duo that was to follow.
Asked why he played on such an old instrument.
Could he not afford a new one?
I did not wait for what I expect was a most charmingly amused reply.
And charm there was indeed from Maria and Jamal in the duo Sonata in Gminor op 65 by Chopin.
A real conversation between equals .
A birds eye view from the page turner I could not judge perfectly their performance but I could see and appreciate with what commitment, passion and technical mastery these two young artists had given to this once much neglected chamber work of Chopin.
In fact only one of nine works for instruments other than piano written by Chopin .
Dedicated to the french cellist,friend of Mendelssohn,Auguste Franchomme dedicatee of the Sonata.
He played the last three movements with the composer in Chopin’s last public concert on the 16th February 1848 at the Salle Pleyel .
He had also collaborated with Chopin on his Grand Duo Concertant and rewrote the cello part of his youthful Polonaise Brillante op 2.
Alkan too dedicated his cello sonata to Franchhomme who died of a massive heart attack shortly after receiving the Legion d’honneur at the age of 75.
He rarely left Paris.
Beautifully shaped Largo ,the cello singing out the melody and very attentively accompanied and commented on by the piano.
The Final Allegro played with great virtuosity from both in a perfectly matched duo performance.
In the famous “Vocalise” by Rachmaninov Jamal allowed his magnificent instrument to fill the room with the finely shaped melodic line that only Rachmaninov could spin.
Sumptuous piano accompaniment from a pianist composer who like Chopin really understood the capabilities to sing of their instrument.
Full of the nostalgia ,passion and yearning for his homeland as like Chopin he had been forced to abandon in his youth.
Shchedrin’s virtuoso piece In the style of Albeniz op 52 brought this magical evening to a transcendental close.
These were in fact the encores enclosed in a programme that was finely thought out by these two remarkable artists.