PHILIPPE CASSARD Piano Recital
POOM PROMMACHART Piano Recital
Esplanade Recital Studio
Tuesday & Wednesday (2 & 3 July
2019)
This review was published in The Straits Times on 6 July 2019 with the title "Soul-stirring kaleidoscope of colours and contrasts".
The
Piano Island Festival, founded by local pianist-entrepreneur Wang Congyu and
inaugurated in 2018, is now in its third edition. Alternating between Singapore and Reunion (French overseas territory in the Indian Ocean ), the
festival includes an international competition, lectures, masterclasses and
public recitals by an international cast of pianists.
Esplanade
Recital Hall was host to four recitals, with evening sessions helmed by
Philippe Cassard (France ) and Poom Prommachart (Thailand ). Cassard will be remembered for performing the complete
solo piano works of Claude Debussy in four recitals at this same venue in 2003,
providing relief and solace during the SARS epidemic.
On
this occasion, he distilled the French composer’s prolific output to just seven
works in a single half, all inspired by the watery realm. Exhibiting an
enormous range of tonal variety, the musical equivalent of impressionist
brush-strokes was applied to pieces like Reflets dans l’eau (Reflections
on the Water), Ondine, Poissons d’or (Goldfishes) and La
cathedrale engloutie (The Engulfed Cathedral).
Cassard
showed this was not a matter of just stepping on the sustaining pedal and
splashing nebulous globs of sound, but a skilful manipulation of colourings and
contrasts. The transition from Brouillards (Mists), with gently shifting
wafts to the vigorous pitter-patter of Jardins sous la pluie (Gardens
in the Rain) was startling in effect. With no half measures given, the
wine-fuelled revelry in L’isle joyeuse (The Happy Island) was one
of full-blown intoxication.
Likewise,
Cassard’s view of Schubert’s penultimate Sonata in A major (D.959) was
not one of quaint Biedermeier charm or drawing room naivete. It was the blood
and guts view of one living in his final year, with all the requisite angst and
vulnerability, and certainly not for the faint of heart.
Still
in his late 20s, Poom Prommachart is Thailand ’s most accomplished and decorated young pianist. His
recital was another study of stark contrasts, now applied to the piano sonata
genre. There cannot be more vastly different works than Beethoven’s late Sonata
No.30 in E major (Op.109) and contemporary Australian composer Carl Vine’s First
Sonata, composed in 1990.
Both
works benefited with his variegated touch and laser-like precision, the
Beethoven coming into his own as a Romantic, full of fire and fervour. Vine’s
violent flailings had the feel of modern ballet, exquisitely choreographed like
a new version of The Rite Of Spring.
After
three short pieces by Khachaturian and Scriabin came the piece de resistance,
the rarely heard Sonata-Ballade by Russian composer Nikolai Medtner, a
contemporary of Rachmaninov. Conceived
as a single extended movement and playing over 20 sprawling minutes, Poom’s
excellent elucidation of the themes and its discursive byways represented a
glorious treatise of the sonata form itself. Hoping to proselytise on behalf of
this almost forgotten Romantic, this imperious reading could not but find him
many new friends.
Poom with the Thai ambassador to Singapore and M.R. Malinee Chakrabandhu, great-great-grand-daughter of King Rama IV of Thailand. |
Encores:
Philippe Cassard performed
DEBUSSY Clair de lune from Suite Bergamasque
SCHUBERT Impromptu in E flat major, Op.90 No.2
Poom Prommachart performed
CHOPIN Nocturne in C sharp minor, Op.Posth
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