KIRILL GERSTEIN Piano Recital
26th Singapore International Piano Festival
Victoria Concert Hall
Saturday (1 June 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 3 June 2019 with the title "Diverse piano showcase of heroism and mortality".
It
is often interesting to attempt and discern thought processes that go into a
pianist’s art of crafting a recital programme. For Russian-American pianist
Kirill Gerstein’s debut at the Singapore International Piano Festival, he chose
works of six composers from lands as diverse as Germany, France and Hungary
(the usual suspects) to England, Bohemia and Armenia (unexepected sources).
In
one of the most intelligently-conceived programmes to be had in a long while,
Gerstein’s unifying theme was heroism and mortality, and the death of heroes.
Opening with Liszt’s Transcendental Etude No.7, known as Eroica,
he displayed a fire-breathing but highly-nuanced brand of virtuosity that was
to occupy the entire evening.
Cast
in E flat major, its ending went straight into the opening chords of
Beethoven’s Eroica Variations, so named as it was based on a dance (from
The Creatures Of Prometheus) that ended up in the finale of his Eroica
Symphony. Much humour and resourcefulness were applied to this
longer-than-usual set which also included a tricky fugue to bat.
Even
more impressive were the sonorities generated in Bohemian composer Leos
Janacek’s Sonata, with a title that carries the 1.X.1905 “From The
Street”. That was the date when a worker was stabbed to death during a
student demonstration in Brno . Its two movements were harrowingly built-up to an
angst-ridden climax of tolling bells. A final funeral march was discarded,
leaving the work incomplete, enigmatically so.
However
the funeral march that took its place was Liszt’s Funerailles, opening
the recital’s second half. Bass notes were sounded with a left hand’s closed
fist and karate chops, and the procession of stampeding left hand octaves was
supposedly a tribute to the recently deceased Chopin. Liszt being Liszt, he had
to make this more difficult than the corresponding episode in Chopin’s Heroic
Polonaise.
Its
companion piece was Thomas Ades’ Berceuse from The Exterminating
Angel, written for and premiered by Gerstein as recently as last January.
Soft bell sounds in treble registers belied the menace of yet another impending
demise, registered by a violent close.
Four
very short pieces followed. Debussy’s Elegie and his final piano work Les
soirs illumines par l’ardeur du charbon (Evenings Illuminated By Glowing
Coals), composed when he was dying of cancer, were brief but atmospheric.
Ethnically flavoured were two dances by Armenian nationalist Komitas,
representing a way of life extinguished by the Armenian genocide on 1915.
To
conclude the evening was Ravel’s Le Tombeau De Couperin, a suite of six
antique dances, each dedicated to a friend slain during the Great War. By now,
Gerstein’s fluid technique and utter clarity were a given as he breezed through
the Prelude and Fugue, followed by a Forlane, Rigaudon and
Minuet, each with their own rhythmic interest.
Only
in the final Toccata did Gerstein’s near infallibility almost came
unstuck, but its thunderous ending and two fast and furious encores
(the Bach-Busoni Chorale Prelude: Nun freut euch, lieben Christen [Rejoice, Beloved Christians] and Chopin’s Waltz
Op.42, nothing to do with death whatsoever) provided an emphatic and heroic
close.
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