Friday, 21 November 2025

ELISO VIRSALADZE Piano Recital / Review

 

ELISO VIRSALADZE Piano Recital
Victoria Concert Hall
Tuesday (18 November 2025)

This review was published in The Straits Times on 20 November 2025 with the title "Legendary pianist Elisa Virsaladze plays Chopin with heart and ebullience".


All thanks to the buzz created by the Frederic Chopin International Piano Competition which concluded in Warsaw about a month ago, music lovers are still debating what constitutes ideal Chopin playing versus what actually wins competitions. Reality lies somewhere in between, no better illustrated by the 83-year-old Georgian pianist Eliso Virsaladze.


Belonging to the venerable generation of pianists that includes Martha Argerich (who no longer performs solo recitals), Vladimir Ashkenazy (now retired) and Daniel Barenboim (diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease), Virsaladze appears unimpeded by age. Belying a slow walk from wing to keyboard, she unleashed torrents of sound and passion on the C.Bechstein grand once she got started.

Photo: Tang Yaoyu


Opening an all-Chopin recital with the Polonaise-Fantasy in A flat major (Op.61) was a most daunting task. There was virtually no warm up, with its declamatory opening statement setting the tone for the evening. Her swift and unsentimental take, eschewing rubato for its own sake, meant there was to be no posturing or virtue-signalling with this music.


She played it straight, and once she had the throbbing polonaise rhythm (based on dances of nobility) going, the constant pulse never flagged. All the accompanying filigree was just that, merely the means to an end as the fantasy elements gradually took over, all the way to the work’s ambiguously heroic and tragic end.

Photo: Tang Yaoyu

Also from Chopin’s late period was his Third Sonata in B minor (Op.58), for which pacing through its four movements was paramount. Virsaladze got it right by not including the first movement’s exposition repeat, instead going headlong into the development’s conflict between martial ideas and pure lyricism.


The mercurial Scherzo was well contrasted with the Largo slow movement’s languorous musings, before the strident octaves and exertions of the imperious Finale. Here, Virsaladze could have momentarily come undone but she held on tenaciously for a heady build-up and thrilling close.

Photo: Tang Yaoyu

Chopin, the creator of exquisite miniatures, occupied the recital’s second half. The pair of Nocturnes (Op.27) are in harmonically related keys of C sharp minor and D flat major respectively. This gave her a chance to showcase the pieces’ varied moods, the former’s smouldering with tension before rapturous release and the latter’s unbroken cantabile spell.


Beautiful as the nocturnes were, a well-selected suite of six Mazurkas (from Op.30, 33 and 59) displaying Chopin’s patriotism and aching nostalgia also showcased Virsaladze’s disarming empathy with this idiom. Poles and Georgians shared similar struggles and tribulations in their centuries-long histories. The trio of late Mazurkas from Op.59 was particularly poignant.

Photo: Tang Yaoyu

The enthralling recital closed with two vastly contrasting Waltzes, the diminutive but graceful G flat major (Op.70 No.1) and the vertiginously swirling A flat major (Op.42) which brought down the house. Virsaladze’s encores were a loving reprise of the earlier dance tandem, the melancholic Mazurka in A minor (Op.68 No.2) followed by the brilliant Waltz in A flat major (Op.34 No.1). Performed with heart, warmth and an ebullience unafraid to take risks, that was what Chopin was all about.

Photo: Tang Yaoyu

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