Sunday, 23 March 2014

Vocal Explosion in St. Clement's Church

pic Juliet
 Juliet Russell, of Vocal Explosion - courtesy of their website

We found ourselves last night in St. Clement's Church, in Hastings Old Town, to hear a programme of gypsy music from the community choir Vocal Explosion.  We hadn't ventured inside this fourteenth-century gem before, but had read about its refurbishment (which aroused the usual mix of "they've ruined a lovely church" and "what an improvement on what was there before").  Personally, I quite like a mix of ancient and modern, so was not offended by the renovations.  It makes a good concert venue, and the assembled ladies and gents of the community choir filed in happily to the chancel, for a programme of gypsy music from Spain to Romania.

Community choirs make no pretension to be grand opera, the purpose being to have a good time with the music as much as to produce a decent sound. The men were, as usual, vastly outnumbered by the women - to the point where, from our position half behind a pillar, the former were completely invisible.  But the women - dressed for the occasion in "sunset" colours of orange and red, some with roses in their hair - certainly seemed to be enjoying themselves, swaying and smiling in a Carmen-meets-the-WI fashion.  The choir was led by Juliet Russell, who had two roses in her hair - a little offputting since from the rear they looked like a couple of stick-up ears, and reminded me slightly of Bambi, for some reason.  Our neighbour in the audience, who told us she had sung with the choir for nine years but was taking a break from it at present, said that Juliet Russell composed some of the numbers herself.  If so, she'd done a good job.  Some of the harmonies were powerful - particularly in an opening number called Asla, which sent shivers down my spine.

The slight tendency towards a revivalist meeting became more pronounced after the break, when Juliet Russell encouraged the audience to clap rhythmically and access their inner power (I may have got that last bit wrong, but you probably get the drift).  In the last number, where the choir was swaying and the audience standing and clapping I warned Paul that I might soon be speaking in tongues.  The man in the row behind us said he wished the Sunday service was as lively.  

I have my reservations about gypsy music - it can sound a bit same-ish after a while, and I can only take so much of dancing beside bonfires.  But the rhythms were good, Juliet Russell impressed as a husky-voiced Carmen and the lady beside us was whooping with applause like any teenager.  I expect to see her with a rose in her hair next time round. 

Antony Mair

Sunday, 9 March 2014

And the winner is...

Taek Gi Lee playing Rachmaninov's 3rd Piano Concerto                          Photograph: John Cole

At the end of the semi-finals of the Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition the generally accepted view seemed to be that one of the two South Koreans - Yekwon Sunwoo and Taek Gi Lee - was likely to be winning the prize.  It came as no surprise that they were two of the three finalists.  Marcin Koziak, from Poland, was the third finalist, but was thought to have only an outside chance of coming out top.  Of the two South Koreans, it's fair to say that Yekwon Sunwoo, with his considerable stage presence and the greater maturity that comes with being 25 as opposed to 17, was thought to be marginally the more likely contender.

The final was made the more interesting since both Yekwon Sunwoo and Taek Gi Lee were playing Rachmaninov's 3rd Piano Concerto.  I invariably think of this as the "Rack 3", after John Gielgud's repeated warnings in the movie Shine that this concerto had been the downfall of many a pianist - as it proved to be for David Helfgott, the main character.

Audience at the White Rock Theatre           Photograph: John Cole
Yekwon Sunwoo was first off the starting block on Saturday night.  Starting slightly nervously, he failed to convey much expression in the first part of the first movement, but gradually got into his stride.  The Rack 3 is an immensely showy piece with a series of solos and cadenzas.  Yekwon Sunwoo's performance reminded me very much of a mountaineer in the Alps, climbing one height after the other, only to find another one beyond.  It was technically brilliant, and the final movement was a showstopper that brought tears to the eyes.  He was followed by Marcin Koziak playing Tchaikovsky's 1st Piano Concerto, which I found competent but a little unmoving after the tumult of Rachmaninov.
  
When Taek Gi Lee stepped onto the stage I had little fear of him collapsing in the manner of David Helfgott. But I was totally unprepared for the ease with which he played - where Yekwon Sunwoo had been a mountaineer, Taek Gi Lee seemed to be taking a walk in the park.  From the moment he first touched the keyboard, there was an astonishing fluidity and lyricism in his playing that captivated everyone in the theatre, bringing a number of members of the audience to their feet.

I wondered whether my judgment was affected by bias - Paul had been ferrying Taek Gi to his rehearsal venue earlier in the week as well as on the Saturday and had got to know him a little.  But it became clear that everyone - including the judges - was of the same mind.  He goes away with the first prize and my hope that his prodigious talent is carefully nurtured to enable him to retain a place he has now earned on the world stage.

Antony Mair 
  
Taek Gi Lee receiving his prize from Dame Fanny Waterman
Photograph: John Cole




Friday, 7 March 2014

A feast of music at the Piano Concerto Competition Semi-final

   Yekwon Sunwoo (South Korea)                                                                       Photograph: John Cole

The semi-finals of the Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition brought a feast of music for those of us in the White Rock Theatre last night.  For the laughable cost of £8 per seat we were treated to seven mini-recitals by a quite remarkable array of young players ranging in age from 17 to 27.  There were originally intended to be six in the semi-final, but the judges considered the standard so high that they stretched it to seven.  Each played a small programme of their own devising, for just under half an hour.

Marcin Koziak (Poland)                                       Photograph: John Cole
The choice of music was wide, from Bach through to Ligeti.  The players had deliberately chosen music to demonstrate their range - Marcin Koziak, from Poland, for example, played a Haydn Sonata, followed by Debussy's Prelude La CathĂ©drale Engloutie and ending with a virtuoso performance of Bartok.  Similarly, Taek Gi Lee, from South Korea, played a Bach Prelude and Fugue followed by a spectacular Fantasy by Liszt.  Asaki Ino, from Japan, gave a beautiful interpretation of Clara Schumann's Variations on a Theme of Robert Schumann before thundering through a Berg sonata.  The Russian Ekaterina Litvintseva seemed to prefer power over expressiveness in her pieces by Rachmaninov, Chopin and Prokofiev.

One of the more interesting moments occurred when Yekwon Sunwoo, also from South Korea, played Ravel's Valse.  It wasn't a piece I knew, but it had been played a little earlier by another competitor, Angie Zhang from the USA.  For an eighteen-year-old, she had demonstrated astonishing power - but I found myself wondering, in the course of her performance, what had happened to the dance in the title.  I thought that perhaps Ravel had composed a modernist interpretation of the waltz, which broke in at odd moments.  Then came Yekwon Sunwoo, who played the piece more subtly, so that the waltz rhythm was clear all the way through, with remarkable light and shade - suddenly the music was perfectly Parisian. 

Taek Gi Lee (South Korea)                                 Photograph: John Cole
The two South Koreans and Marcin Koziak go through to the finals on Saturday, with Koziak playing Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto, and Yekwon Sunwoo and the astounding 17-year-old Taek Gi Lee both playing Rachmaninov's Third.  Yekwon Sunwoo, 25, has remarkable stage presence and the smile of a schoolboy rather surprised to find himself the centre of attention.  His compatriot Taek Gi Lee packs far more  emotional punch in his playing than you would expect from someone his age.   The comparison between the two South Koreans playing the same Rachmaninov piece promises to make for an interesting evening.  As for Koziak, tall and unassuming, with the classic long hands of the pianist,  his Debussy was very beautiful and I've no doubt he'll bring out the full emotion of Tchaikovsky's score.

I confess to one disappointment.  I'd shepherded Annika Treutler, from Germany, to rehearsal in St. Mary in the Castle and then to the White Rock in the first round.  I was delighted to see that she'd made the semi-final.  She played a Schumann Fantasy very beautifully last night but was trounced by the men.  The standard is, indeed, amazing.

Antony Mair   


The judges                                                                   Photograph: John Cole 
  




Monday, 3 March 2014

Promoting the Piano


Ethan Richardson playing in Priory Meadow                                            Photograph by John Cole

The Hastings International Piano Concerto Competition is now upon us.  As a warm-up and a way of involving the local community, a Yamaha baby grand was placed in Priory Meadow shopping mall over last weekend and a series of players of all ages showed their skill on the keys.

Paul and I were on duty as stewards on the Sunday afternoon.  A shopping mall is pretty soulless at the best of times, and Priory Meadow more so than most.  Vicious draughts have a way of whistling round corners and hitting your back, and a lot of the shoppers look as if they are there as a last resort.  But it was wonderful to see the power of music captured on the faces of passers-by, some of whom sat, quietly attentive, on the handful of chairs provided for the purpose.  People of all ages and classes were spellbound, and I've never been so struck by the way in which music winds itself into the psyche.

Today the Competition started in earnest, with forty competitors from all over the world performing in front of a panel of judges in the White Rock Theatre.  I accompanied one candidate and her accompanist (who plays the part of the orchestra, scored for piano) to St Mary in the Castle for some thunderous rehearsal of Prokoviev, then back to the White Rock Theatre where she acquitted herself admirably in front of the judges.  Semi-finalists are announced on Wednesday.  The six semi-finalists perform a series of recitals on the Thursday evening and are then narrowed down to three finalists, who play with full orchestra on Saturday.  I'm looking forward to every minute.

Antony Mair   


Isobel Richardson playing in Priory Meadow
Photograph by John Cole