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OVERALL NOISE RATING:
2 (too engrossed in Lane's dissertations of each work. And the stupid coughs. Why does everyone choose to make irritating noise during silences in between movements? It is just as distracting as coughing during a piece.)
The Noise Rating Index is a partially-objective measurement of pager and handphone blasts, 9pm and 10pm watch beeps, coughing-during-the-pianissimo-bits, intra-audience conversation and other mind-bogglingly inept noises emitted in the concert hall during actual performance of music. It is measured on a scale of 0 to 5, in increasing annoyance.
This review has been kindly sponsored by the Singapore Symphonia Co. Ltd
by Soo Kian Hing
What is unique about each pianist's recital is the level of communication between the performer and the audience. Most pianists tell the audience about a work by playing it to them. Lane however, chooses to educate the audience verbally - which is not out of his capacity, being a Professor of Piano at the Royal Academy of Music, and he offered much personal insight and some humorous anecdotes behind what inspired the composers. And seriously, his introductions did enhance my appreciation of his performance.
From Beethoven, we move on to the theme of the Festival proper: 'Celebrating Chopin', though, perhaps, once removed. The Russian composer-pianist Sergei Rachmaninov based his second set of variations on Chopin's Prelude Op.28 No.20, a simple piece that in its original entirety only takes up thirteen bars. With the first few heavy, ponderous chords, Lane gave an incredibly boundless breadth of sound and depth of sonority - the very qualities that may have initially attracted Rachmaninov to write variations for this piece. As the piece develops, we see more of the composer at his most lyrical and romantic, writing with elaborate virtuosity and characteristically dense fingerwork, even more than in his famously lyrical Second Piano Concerto Op.18. Tackling the composer's virtuosity in the most difficult passages, Lane suffered a few glaring memory lapses (he had to stop mid-passage during one), but his graceful phrasing and poetic rendition made a convincing showcase for this phenomenal work, making me wonder why it is not played or recorded more often.
The last piece on the programme was Saint-Saėns' Etude in F major Op.111 No.6
"Toccata" - justifiably panned as being empty note-spinning in the programme notes (we have Goh Yew Lin, John Howard and Tou-Liang to thank for imparting their knowledge in the programme booklets this year). Lane again sustained a few occasional lapses and overstretched his technique in this ostentatiously technical piece, but his choice of this boisterous Etude ride gave this recital a satisfyingly rousing finale.
Lane then enthusiastically offered an encore, Schulz-Elvėr's transcription of Johann Strauss' famous Blue Danube Waltz.
Starting with the gentle shimmering waves of the Danube under the warm sun, Lane led us through the various sections
of the waltz, embellished heavily with running notes and chromatic fill-ins which he carried off with his usual flair.
July 3 - Dmitri Alexeev
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He later obliged the appreciative audience with encores three more times, the
first being Rachmaninov's Prelude in D major Op.23 No.4, a ruminating, meditative piece which highlights the composer's lyrical writing, and made use of fully by Lane's matching musical style. Liadov's short but fun piece, Musical Snuffbox, was played
suitably deadpan by Lane, the humour transpiring at the end when the clockwork eventually slowed to a stop. The last encore for the night was Liszt's Liebestraum - technically easier than other Liszt works, this piece nevertheless was given new life by Lane's hypnotic touch.
Piers Lane's tender and lyrical interpretation had buffered the taxing
programme tonight, which would customarily fall in the realm of a virtuoso's repertoire, and may be tearjerkers and crowd-pleasers in the hands of a technical daredevil. Lane certainly does not lack flair and brilliance in showmanship, but more importantly he suffuses each piece with painstaking warmth and poetry, dazzling not with technique alone but with his sense of drama and his understanding of individual composers and pieces. And, of course, few other pianists could offer an equally educational recital, one that would not only provide enjoyment and entertainment for the audience, but give us an insight into the composers as human beings, not just foreign names attached to musical works.
Soo Kian Hing hopes to be taking a stroll beside the Blue Danube soon.
519: 7.7.1999. up.25.7.1999©Soo Kian Hing
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