Pianist Péter Tóth – Soloist with the Palo Alto Philharmonic

Pianist Péter Tóth

It is certainly no surprise that Palo Alto, one of the most interesting communities in the United States, has a fine community orchestra (it is known as the “Palo Alto Philharmonic,” now in its 24th year). It’s Conductor and Music Director, Thomas Shoebotham has had lots of experience with local and regional ensembles, including Opera San Jose, Peninsula Symphony, the San Francisco Concerto Orchestra and Berkeley Opera. He isn’t just a “stick waver” either, for he has paid his dues playing chamber music as well as appearing in solo performances on cello and piano.

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Archived in these categories: Piano


RE-IMAGININGS – Santa Cruz Chamber Players at Christ Lutheran Church of Aptos

Bach’s great harpsichord masterpiece, the “Goldberg Variations,” transcribed for string trio? – This was the first piece on one of the most special musical programs of the season. It brought together five of the finest local musicians including the extraordinarily gifted and charming Cynthia Baehr violinist, who served as artistic music director for this program entitled “Re-imaginings: Great Music by Great Composers Inspired by Other Great Composers.”

I must admit I didn’t come prepared with high expectations of an arrangement by contemporary Russian violinist and conductor Dimitry Sitkovetsky (B.1954) of one of Bach’s greatest, most complicated and intricate works for keyboard (probably harpsichord). By the middle of the first variation I found myself really enjoying this work performed with perfect intonation, precision and Vivaldi-esque Italian-German brio.

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Archived in these categories: 20th Century, Baroque, Chamber music, String trio, Strings


An Impassioned Beethoven “Hammerklavier” performance by Soheil Nasseri

The Distinguished Artists Concert and Lecture series offered another cultural coup on Sunday with the presentation of Iranian-American pianist, Soheil Nasseri.

While it was obvious from the beginning of the program that Mr. Nasseri was up to the highest standards set by the many outstanding pianists presented over the years, a distinguishing feature of this concert was the presentation of one of the greatest and most challenging works in the piano repertoire, Beethoven’s Op 106 Hammerklavier Sonata, which occupied the entire second half of the program. This enigmatic monumental work, comprising an entire life gauntlet of human emotions and aspirations, is usually reserved for the most seasoned and mature artists, with few being able to sustain its intricate technical and interpretive demands.

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Archived in these categories: Cabrillo College, Piano


Pianist Nobuyuki Tsujii Opens Carmel Music Society’s 2011-2012 Season

Those attending the Carmel Music Society’s season-opening event, a recital by Van Cliburn Piano Competition Gold Medalist Nobuyuki Tsujii, arrived at Sunset Center yesterday afternoon expecting to hear one pianist. However, by the end of the afternoon’s performance it was apparent that they had actually heard four quite different pianists, so varied was his performing style. We heard Tsujii play some aggressive over-the-top Mozart, some exciting virtuoso Liszt, a powerful, yet sensitive performance of a masterpiece by Mussorgsky, and finally as two encores, compositions written by Tsujii himself.

Expectations for this event had been running high. Although Tsujii has been blind since birth, his sensory motor skills and proprioception are so masterfully developed that after competing against some of the finest young pianists in the world during the 2009 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition, his extraordinary virtuosity and musicianship earned him a shared Gold Medal. Since the competition, he has developed a “rock star” following in his homeland, Japan, where he is celebrated as a national hero.

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Archived in these categories: Carmel Music Society, Piano


Pianist Anton Nel and the St. Petersburg String Quartet

As Chamber Music Monterey Bay introduced its new season last night at Sunset Center in Carmel, President Amy Anderson was on hand to greet the audience, welcome back the St. Petersburg String Quartet (SPSQ), and also to beat the drum for its new four-year project of commissioning new works —Arc of Life — the first installment of which will be a new string quartet by distinguished composer Joan Tower to premiere in April, 2012.

The fine players of the SPSQ, violinists Alla Aranovskaya and Evgeny Zvonnikov, violist Boris Vayner and cellist Leonid Shukayev, have appeared on CMMB’s concert season before, and undoubtedly will again in the future. The big buzz for tonight’s concert was guest pianist Anton Nel joining the SPSQ. Born in South Africa, and the distinguished first prize winner of the 1987 Naumburg International Piano Competition, Mr. Nel has best of all possible worlds — he has a tenured faculty position as Chair of the Piano Department at the University of Texas in Austin, and yet has a full career as a recitalist, concerto soloist and frequent collaborator with some of the world’s most distinguished musicians.

That he is a sensitive and stylistically meticulous chamber player was evident throughout the evening’s concert as he dazzled us with the ease and effortlessness of his playing in two major works of the chamber music repertoire: the Brahms Piano Quartet No. 1 in G Minor and the Dvořák Piano Quintet No. 2 in A Major. Nel has his lyrical side with gorgeous sound and elegantly shaped phrases but can also turn on his virtuosity and move about the keyboard at the speed of light.

It was curious at last night’s concert that the first half of the program seemed rather muted and off in the distance. The opening work for string quartet, “Five Miniatures on Jewish Folk Songs” by Sulkhan Tsintsadze, was tantalizing with its elusive Eastern European flavors of sadness and nostalgia, but however charming, they were so brief and remote that they seem to have ended before they had hardly begun.

The second work on the program, the Brahms Piano Quartet in G Minor, also had a muted distant quality about it that left us waiting for something to happen. You couldn’t fault the quality of the players, for all the necessary aspects of technical mastery and first class musicianship were there; however, it was a distinctly low key performance until the tempestuous Finale. At that point, the musicians let the Genie out of the bottle. All of a sudden, the music came alive and took possession of our hearts and minds, so the performance had a great ending.

After intermission, we heard the magnificent Dvořák Piano Quintet No. 2 in A Major, and although it had its laid back moments (a very slow introduction to the first movement, and a very slow performance of the beautiful “Dumka”), ultimately, the final two movements created a exciting ending to this great work.

Responding to audience applause and standing ovation, the musicians reprised as an encore the exhilarating Scherzo movement.

End

Archived in these categories: Chamber music, Chamber Music Monterey Bay, Piano