A weighty thud of Montero's hand plopped down on the Steinway's keyboard at the opening of Busoni's arrangement of the Bach chaconne. It was, it turns out, the hallmark of her style, tending toward strong attack and full sound over subtlety and shaping of melodic lines. This is not the best way to play Bach, but it is a very good way to play Busoni's thunderous refashioning of Bach, and it was thrilling to hear Montero maxed out on all those octaves. (Montero's hard-edged tone, tempestuous flair, and now wild hair often call to mind the elder pianist who has done so much to further her career, Martha Argerich -- Liszt, Prokofiev, Stravinsky should be strong suits.) There were sections that featured colorful contrasts of tone, but an overuse of the sustaining pedal muddied some of the finer fingerwork. While nothing is left to chance in the Bach-Busoni piece, the chaconne was at heart an improvisatory genre, and the remaining two pieces, sonatas by Chopin and Schumann, reinforced the theme of improvisation that ran through the program.
Tim Page, Classical Pianist Montero, Quite A 'Jingle' Belle (Washington Post, December 17) |
Gabriela Montero improvising at the Kölner Philharmonie
(see more videos from the Cologne recital here)
Some of the audience headed for the exits at the end of the Schumann, not wanting to hear music created on the spot, but most of us stayed for the most unusual part of Gabriela Montero's performance. Appearing with a microphone in hand, she thanked us for staying and asked the audience to sing her some melodies to use as the basis for her improvisations. With all four of them (Puccini's Nessun dorma, Jingle Bells, Satie's Gymnopédie No. 1, and Beethoven's Ode to Joy), she listened, worked out the tune, played it through with more or less its usual harmonization, and then launched into the world of her musical fancy.
Gabriela Montero: Baroque Album Bach and Beyond Chopin, Falla, Ginestera |
Sidney Harman Hall, an expansion of the Shakespeare Theater, has its glass and steel façade (reminiscent of the beautiful addition to the Pierpont Morgan Library) on F Street, facing the Verizon Center. Its main space -- black stage and dark wood details -- seats 775 people, in a wide arrangement, making the sound less warm and direct than the Terrace Theater to my ears, but still intimate. This new downtown venue, if an article in The Economist (Capital of culture, October 4) is to be believed, will help foster "an intellectual and artistic renaissance" in Washington. Charles Isherwood's article for the New York Times (The Graffiti of the Philanthropic Class, December 2) was snide but spot-on, taking note of the overabundance of large plain lettering in the space, with every possible architectural component named for a donor. Instead of chimes or flashing lights, an airport-style loudspeaker announcement chided the audience to return to their seats after intermission. That unfortunately cut into the buzz of my $3 (!) espresso.
The final WPAS concert for the calendar year is tomorrow night, featuring violist Jennifer Stumm (December 18, 7:30 pm) at the Kennedy Center Terrace Theater.
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