SYDNEY
INTERNATIONAL PIANO
COMPETITION OF AUSTRALIA 2016
COMPETITION OF AUSTRALIA 2016
Preliminaries
Round One, Day Two
Friday 8 July 2016 (1.30 pm)
A second day of piano fireworks began
with ANDREY GUGNIN (Ukraine, 29 years) performing on the Shigeru Kawai
grand. The programming of Beethoven's Fantasy (Op.77), one of the
German's strangest works, was an interesting one. Its alternating sequence of
downward scales and expositional material remains puzzling, but it was the
pastoral-sounding subject that drew some synergy with Liszt's Faribolo Pastour (Pastoral
Whimsy) which followed. Here was one of Liszt's more serene pieces, like a
Chopinesque nocturne (not too far away from the Andante spianato, but
cast in G minor), which was lovingly caressed. Completing the recital was Liszt's
mercurial Feux follets, a means to show that the pianist's miraculous
faculties were still intact.
JEREMY SO (Australia, 25 years)
presented a very interesting all 20-century programme, with two Ligeti Etudes
sandwiching Scriabin's Seventh Sonata, or the “White Mass”. The
devastating Desordre (Etude No.1) showed this young man could
operate both right and left brains independent of one another at spellbinding
speeds without skipping a beat. In the Scriabin, he conducted an unholy
communion with the intoxicating sound and orgiastic ambience to match. The last
time I heard this played as well was by a certain Marc-Andre Hamelin. With Automne
a Varsovie (Autumn in Warsaw) and its free-fall of descending
figurations, one was certain that the tinted leaves were positively
radioactive.
ALEXEI MELNIKOV (Russia, 26 years)
opened with Scriabin's Sonata-Fantasy No.2, its slow and beseeching
first movement contrasted with the restlessly galloping second movement. This
was a finely nuanced reading with its overwrought emotions clearly displayed.
Equally impressive were two contrasted Debussy Preludes, the stentorian chords
of La Cathedrale Engloutie (The Engulfed Cathedral) cushioned by
fine pedalling and the spewing pyrotechnics display of Feux d'artifice (Fireworks)
which blazed across the keyboard without apology. Another promising Russian to
watch.
I will admit to personal interest in POOM
PROMMACHART (Thailand, 26 years) who had studied in Singapore's Nanyang
Academy of Fine Arts before going to London. He is incidentally the only
pianist to have previously performed at this competition. His very impressive
recital opened with a Rameau Prelude, “Le entretiens des muses”,
which was delicately crafted and exquisitely voiced. The main work was Liszt's Variations
on Weinen, Klagen, Sorgen, Zagen, which comprised a prelude, massive
passacaglia body and chorale to end. His sense of the work's architecture,
building up like many arches of a bridge ensured that interest was maintained
through its 18-minute span, finally delighting in the Bach chorale in a major
key, coming like sunshine through a sky of dark clouds.
PARK WOO-GIL (South Korea, 23 years)
began with Haydn's Sonata No.51 in D major in two movements, with
simplicity of textures in the first leading to full flow of jollity in the
second. A delightful performance, with D major then turning a shade darker to
the D minor of Mendelssohn's Variations Serieuses. The subject is
morose, even depressive but the inventive variations which alternate between
minor and major modes never descend into technical exercises, and Park has the
ability to musically engage, even in the droll obligatory fugal variation.
Clearly a talent to watch.
Like Melnikov, LINDSAY GARRITSON (USA,
29 years) also offered Scriabin's Sonata-Fantasie No.2 for starters. In
the first movement, her version had slightly less contrasts but that was evened
out in the second movement, where she reaped a whirlwind. Attacking its
measures from the start, it made for a gripping performance. Carl Vine's Toccatissimo
completed the programme, and although it was less angular or highly contoured
than Rashkovskiy's earlier outing, it was still very convincing. Only a slip at
the minor blotted the copybook.
DANIEL LE (Australia, 23 years) is
another pianist who has studied in Singapore, specifically at the Yong Siew Toh
Conservatory. Michael Kieran Harvey's Toccata DNA has much in common
with Vine's Toccatissimo, in terms of outward display and accessibility
for the audience while being awfully difficult for the pianist. The difference
is that it has a quiet and slow introduction leading into a jazzy extremely
fast section that hinted of the boogie woogie. Le gave a most persuasive
performance that segued quietly into Chopin's Ballade No.4, which
unfolded beautifully to its ecstatic climax. A short pause saw some premature
applause but totally unfazed, he swallowed the coda with aplomb for a rapturous
finish.
OXANA SHEVCHENKO (Kazakhstan, 28 years)
made an excellent impression with a highly varied programme which began with a
Rameau Allemande. Her crystalline sound and feather lightness of touch
lit up this elegant little piece, which continued into Carl Vine's Bagatelles
Nos.2 and 3. The former had a scherzo-like quality, the latter's
hazy opening soon gave way to a most sentimental of melodies, however
short-lived. Speaking of love and death, her view of Granados Balada
from Goyescas took on a more melodramatic edge, and contrasted with Xie
Ming's earlier performance, hers had more fire and passion. In short, a more
nuanced reading.
The choice of EDWARD NEEMAN
(Australia, 32 years) programming Richard Meale's Coruscations seemed
rather unfortunate, simply because despite his obvious ardent advocacy, the
atonal work was soon lost to this listener within the opening two minutes. I
just could not wait for it to end. Ten minutes seemed like a half-hour. And
when he eventually did, and began on Liszt's Polonaise No.2 in E major,
I could not wait for it to end either. The blatant barnstorming of this dragged
out, empty and bombastic piece did little to endear, and not helped by
deliberate rubatos and other posturings.
WANG YINFEI (China, 30 years) felt
somewhat ill at ease in Scarlatti's famous slow Sonata in B minor
(K.87). When it is taken fractionally too fast, the dreamily intimate sound
world is lost. There was a grandiloquent opening to Liszt's Reminiscences de
Don Juan, which had sleights of hand and grandstanding aplenty. However a
lapse with a short segment being repeated and other sections left out sullied
the proceedings. For these kind of party pieces, nothing less than total
perfection matters, and Wang did look displeased with himself at the end.
YUI FUSHIKI (Japan, 25 years) came
close to a furniture malfunction, when her Steinway stool could not adjust
downwards on her command. A technician saved the day by literally sitting on it
until it yielded (he was heavier, of course). Anyway, her version of Chopin's Polonaise-Fantasie
Op.61 (the third performance of the day) was fuss-free, filled with nobility
and an elegant touch. More of that came in Peter Sculthorpe's Harbour
Dreaming, a work with thematic links with his Piano Concerto, which
has Japanese musical influences.Its repeated notes, clothed in a sensuous mist
of sonority from excellent pedalling, provided the most hypnotic moments of the
evening.
LUU QUANG HONG (Vietnam, 25 years) was
brave to even attempt Chopin's over-familiar Polonaise in A flat major
Op.53 “Heroic”. He began commandingly, but skimped on the sweeping
upward scales by tricking the way to the top when he realised he could not
manage the run. This happened not just once, but twice. A major mess towards
the end put paid to the performance. A similar mishap dogged the second of two
Poemes Op.32 by Scriabin, although the first was played close to perfectly.
Rachmaninov's Prelude in G sharp minor (Op.32 No.12) and Etude-tableaux
(Op.33 No.9) fared well too, but the earlier blemishes would be hard to
erase.
CHEN MOYE (China, 32 years) is
one of the competition's oldest pianists, and his stage demeanour is a modest one. His programme however worked
to perfection because he was able to vary tonal colour, beginning with
Scarlatti's Sonata in G (K.8), which interestingly alternated between
major and minor modes, and two vastly contrasted Lyric Pieces by Grieg. Butterfly
had lightness while March of the Dwarves raced through with manically
plodding footsteps. The piece de resistance was however Horowitz's rewriting of
Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No.19, which he made convincing by not
pummelling through its pages but highlighting its decadent harmonies, extra
notes and keeping the audience guessing what happens next.
KONG JIANING (China, 30 years)
smartly traversed a 20-minute journey from order to chaos. Bach's Prelude
& Fugue in G sharp minor (WTC I) came with smooth and clear
lines, which descended into the loud, abrupt and jerky interjections of Graham
Hair's Under Aldebaran. This kind of violence soon evaporated to the
silence from which the malevolence of Scarbo from Ravel's Gaspard de
la nuit emerged. Cue more convulsive and jerky movements, but of a more
purposeful kind, where all the drama and volumatic surges contributed to a
thrilling ride. A pianist with much to recommend.
The Australian contribution by FANTEE
JONES (USA, 22 years) was none other than Percy Grainger's Country
Dances, and wasn't everybody waiting for this moment of ultimate levity?
This perennial light classic (would this be its first time ever in an
international competition) was inserted between Haydn's Sonata No.31 in
E major, which shared some good humour in common in its outer movements, and
Henri Dutilleux's Choral et Variations from his early Sonata. Her
Haydn was crisp and likeable and the Dutilleux very engaging in its virtuosic
blend of dissonance and tradition.
TONY LEE (Australia, 24 years)
completed the first preliminary round with a warm, gratifying reading of
Beethoven's Sonata in E flat major (Op.27 No.1). The rich chords in the
first movement had its equal in the 3rd movement's chorale theme,
which had its final say just before the sonata's end. Despite a very small
stumble in the 3rd movement, he recovered to finish very well.
Tagged on like two encores were Rachmaninov's Daisies, a melancholic
song transcription, and Oriental Sketch, which had nothing to do with
the East but a short rumbling train portrait (the Orient Express). Both were
played very well.
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