|
| Leif Ove Andsnes/Marc-AndrĂ© Hamelin review – duo bring uncompromising brilliance to Stravinsky | by Andrew Clements May 31, 2022 | Wigmore Hall, London The pianists united to play Stravinsky’s overwhelming and savage two-piano version of the Rite of Spring, with Adams, Schumann and Debussy in the first half The afternoon in Paris in 1912, when Igor Stravinsky showed the just finished score of The Rite of Spring to Claude Debussy, must be top of many people’s wish-I’d been-a-fly-on-the-wall moments. Together the two composers played through a piano-duet arrangement that Stravinsky had made, with Debussy apparently sight-reading his part faultlessly. Perhaps it’s because of that encounter between two of the 20th-century’s greatest composers that nowadays the Rite is heard performed in that piano version far more often than similar arrangements of other celebrated orchestral scores. It was the piece that Leif Ove Andsnes and Marc-André Hamelin first recorded as a duo 14 years ago, and it formed the second half of their latest venture together at the Wigmore Hall. The Rite suits both pianists’ faultless techniques and uncompromising brilliance perfectly, and the savage intensity of their immaculately coordinated performance (playing the piano-duet version on two pianos) was overwhelming, just a bit short on some of the colours and details that are such an indelible part of orchestral performances. Continue reading... | | | | |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment