MEMORIES & POSTCARDS
STEVEN SPOONER Piano
Recital
Esplanade Recital Studio
Wednesday (26 November 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 28 November 2014
The
piano is an instrument with enormous range, possessing the capabilities of an
orchestra to exploit every colour, mood and nuance of musical expression.
Compositions for piano are thus like canvasses on which every variety of paint
and pastel is applied by a composer to his own fancy. This recital by American
pianist Steven Spooner was a masterclass on how a piano can conjure up images
of landscapes and portraiture for the ears like a palette and paintbrush can
for the eyes.
Claude
Debussy wrote out his 24 Preludes
before appending evocative French titles to each, inspired by some literary
quote or scenery (hence the reference to postcards here). With deft use of
pedalling and a variegated touch, watching and listening to the First Book of twelve Preludes unfold in Spooner’s hands was
pleasure itself.
Even
in the simple group of sustained chords in the opening Dancers of Delphi , gentle echoes resounded just long
enough before the next notes appeared. There was none of the muddiness
associated with amateur musings, but the bell-like clarity when pedals unlock
secrets to a piano’s soul.
His
characterisations of each successive number were gripping and varied according
to the inherent moods. There is an astonishing sequence which began with the
swirling tarantella rhythm of The Hills of
Anacapri, followed by bleakness and desolation in Footsteps in the Snow before erupting into the storm of What The West Wind Saw, Debussy’s most
violent piece bar none.
And
before one could catch a breath, the utter simplicity of Girl with the Flaxen Hair descended like angel dust. What contrasts
provided by the crashing chords in The
Engulfed Cathedral and the book’s close with the impishness of Puck’s Dance and dixieland swagger of Minstrels, were all captured with much
vividness.
The
second half began with four popular but diverse Schubert songs transcribed by
Franz Liszt. The art of the transcriber is akin to that of an alchemist, where
something like base metal is turned into gold. Not that any of Schubert’s
lieder is lead, but with Liszt’s Midas touch, miracles do occur.
Voice
and piano become unity in the frequent crossing of hands of Wohin? (Whither) and lovely echoing effects in Ständchen (Serenade).
Ferocious repeated octaves define The Erl
King, and Spooner’s blistering account was worth the while just to watch him
sweat.
Like
the pianists of the fabled Golden Age, Spooner was prey to composition and
transcription himself. Three of his virtuoso etudes brought down the house. The
first was a toccata à la Martha
Argerich, all of flying fingers and hot-blooded Latino passion. The second and
longest was My Funny Valentine in the
ruminative bluesy manner of Keith Jarrett, while the last a speculation on how
Vladimir Horowitz might have interpreted We
Are The Champions by Queen.
Late
old Volodya might disagree but there was no doubt that Spooner’s two encores
were Horowitz classics, Chopin’s A flat major Waltz (Op.69 No.1), appropriately entitled L’Adieu (Farewell) and
the delectable Scarlatti Sonata in D
minor. By the applause and accolades he received, the pianist had done his idol
proud.
All photos by the kind permission of Musique Loft.
1 comment:
Oh, how wish I could have been there to hear this amazing recital!
Diana Cangemi
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