DIVERGENCE
ALBERT TIU, Piano with
School of the Arts Concert Hall
Sunday (30 June 2019 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 2 July 2019 with the title "When the divergent paths of Brahms and Liszt converge".
The
title of this concert comes from the fact that two composers featured here
represented divergent paths which the course of music took during the 19th
century.
In a brief musical history lesson given by conductor Adrian Tan,
German composer Johannes Brahms represented the conservative “keepers of the
faith” while Hungary-born Franz Liszt was a beacon for future and modernistic
trends.
The
second piano concertos of both composers reflected this divergence, however
when heard back back in concert – a rare opportunity itself - an unusual
convergence was also a result as well. Both were works of maturity, conceived
as symphonic essays first and foremost, with the demanding piano solo parts
integrated into the whole almost like an afterthought.
Far
from being an obliggato role, Philippines-born and Singapore-based pianist
Albert Tiu had a superhuman task cut out for him. Playing for almost over 70
minutes, he was a figure of utter concentration and composure. In the Liszt, he
brought its narrative through a slow boil, from its slow chorale-like opening
and intricate filigree, all the way to the barnstorming – big chords, storming
octaves and sweeping glissandi - more associated with the pianist-composer.
In
the Brahms, the mighty bluster of its opening cadenza was a foil for an inner
vulnerability, which Tiu brought out with much cogency. Both Brahms and Liszt
were fire-breathing virtuosos in their youth, but lived out their old age as
god-like sages.
This
reviewer remembers Tiu performing this same Brahms with the Singapore Symphony
Orchestra as a teenager 30 years ago at a piano competition finals. He might
have achieved note-perfection then in his impetuous youth, but has now truly
come to grips with Brahms’ world weariness, warts and all. The Scherzo
second movement sounded under-rehearsed, but shaky as it was, Tiu became
steadfast like a rock with the orchestra somehow managing to keep up.
In
the Liszt, a measure of the sublime was afforded in the solo played by
orchestral cellist Peh Xiang Hong, an episode where Tiu merely accompanied her.
In the slow movement of the Brahms, her warm cello solo was an inspiration, but
pity that the view of her was completed blocked by the Steinway grand.
As
a final point of convergence, the fleet-fingered close of both concertos was
achieved with mercurial lightness and a streak of scintillating brilliance. As
an encore, Tiu cheekily offered an over-ornamented edition of Chopin’s
otherwise familiar Nocturne in E flat major (Op.9 No.2), knowing full
well Brahms would not have approved.
Before
the two concertos, the Braddell Heights Symphony Orchestra performed Wagner’s
portentous Overture to Tannhäuser. The brass was barely warmed up in the
opening Pilgrim’s Chorus, but the ensemble soon gelled to give a truly
spirited and cohesive reading. It was simply refreshing to see how this humble
community orchestra has blossomed under conductor Adrian Tan’s leadership.
No comments:
Post a Comment