Showing posts with label Toccata on L'homme armé. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toccata on L'homme armé. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Just a little encore by Hamelin...
We're possibly entering a new golden age of the composer-pianist, methinks.
Stupendous recital by one of the very finest, Marc-André Hamelin, at the Wigmore Hall the other night. It included (among much else) one of the most beautiful and emotionally devastating accounts of the Schumann Fantasie that I can remember, plus a goodly number of encores, one of which was Hamelin's own Toccata on L'Homme Armé. This wild and wonderful creation was commissioned by the Van Cliburn Competition for the 2017 competitors to play as a set piece.
Some of us trotted backstage to say hello afterwards and I couldn't help remarking that I would have liked to see the competitors' faces when they opened up that score for the first time. "Oh," said the ever-modest Marc, "it's not really that difficult..."
O...K....
Have a listen, above.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)