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Our motto: "Critical thinking in the cheap seats." Unbiased, honest classical music and opera opinions, occasional obituaries and classical news reporting, since 2007. All written content © 2019 by Paul J. Pelkonen. For more about Superconductor, visit this link. For advertising rates, click this link. Follow us on Facebook.
Showing posts with label Marc-Andre Hamelin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marc-Andre Hamelin. Show all posts

Sunday, February 10, 2019

Concert Review: The All-Stars Chamber

Marc-André Hamelin joins the Juilliard String Quartet at the 92nd St. Y.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
The Juilliard String Quartet (right and left) were joined by Marc-André Hamelin (Center) on Friday night at the 92nd St. Y.
Photo interpolation by the author, who should really know better than to try things like this on deadline.

It's an incredible luxury to be able to do whatever the hell you want. On Friday night, pianist Marc-Andre Hámelin joined the Juilliard String Quartet for their appearance at the 92nd St. Y, adding himself to the second half of a concert program of chamber music. The Juilliard Quartet is just as storied (if not more so) than Mr. Hamelin, having existed in one form or another since its foundation by composer-critic Virgil Thomson in 1946.

Friday, November 3, 2017

Concert Review: An Orchestra of Ten

Marc-André Hamelin returns to Carnegie Hall. 
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin and his orchestra.
Photo by Canetty Clarke © 2017 Hyperion Records.
The Canadian-born Boston-based pianist Marc-André Hamelin is not the biggest star to play his instrument. He doesn’t gyrate on his bench, flail his arms or wear short skirts that scandalize traditionalists. No. On Wednesday night, he came to Carnegie Hall, programmed unbelievably difficult stuff, and then blew the audience through the back wall of Stern Auditorium.

The sad part is, this hallowed venue was only half full to hear a musician of this caliber.

Thursday, December 29, 2016

The Year in Reviews 2016: Recitals and Chamber Music

We look at the best intimate concerts of a troubled 2016.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
The Danish String Quartet played last works by Shostakovich and Schubert, a highlight
of 2016. Photo © 2016 The Danish String Quartet.
2016 may have been a difficult year, with a lot of musical high points. Here, Superconductor cherry-picks the ten best small scale vocal recitals, chamber concerts and piano recitals of the year that was, presented in chronological order. All hyperlinks connect to Superconductor reviews written by Paul J. Pelkonen.

Monday, November 14, 2016

Concert Review: Not Just Greasy Kids' Stuff

Marc-André Hamelin at the 92nd St. Y.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Pianist Marc-André Hamelin returned to New York on Saturday night.
Photo © 2016 Hyperion Records courtesy Hemsing Associates.
A visit from the pianist Marc-André Hamelin is an occasion for happines among New Yorkers. The Canadian-born, Boston-based virtuoso has recorded a vast array of difficult works by the likes of Liszt, Alkan and Godowsky. More recently, he has recently turned his attention to the more familiar works of Haydn and Mozart. Saturday night's recital at the 92nd St. Y's Kaufman Auditorium was focused almost exclusively on the latter, presenting six Mozart pieces in a brief but satisfying concert.

Saturday, June 25, 2016

Spring Breakdown 2016: The Recitals

We look at the best solo performance of the year so far.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Lisette Oropesa (right) in recital at the Park Avenue Armory.
Photo by Da Peng Nuo.
It takes nerve to go out on stage by yourself, or to take the stage with just your voice and a hopefully friendly pianist providing accompaniment. That's the premise of this look at five great recitals for piano and voice that Superconductor was witness to in the spring of 2016. Presented in just-about-chronological order.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Concert Review: Business As Unusual

The Budapest Festival Orchestra returns to Carnegie Hall.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Man and baton: Budapest Festival Orchestra music director Iván Fischer
in a pensive moment. Photo © 2015 Budapest Festival Orchestra/Channel Classics.

Founded in 1983, the Budapest Festival Orchestra is a relatively recent addition to the ranks of central Europe's great ensembles. Under the direction of Iván Fischer, these Hungarian players always offer something fresh, from Lincoln Center stagings of the great Mozart operas to powerhouse readings of the great works of the 19th and 20th century. On Thursday night, the Hungarian band returned to Carnegie Hall for a conventional concert program (overture, concerto, symphony) that proved, in its execution to be anything but ordinary.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Concert Review: Taking Twin Peaks (by strategy)

Marc-André Hamelin returns to Carnegie Hall.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin grabs a slice of the piano.
Photo © Marc-André Hamelin courtesy Hemsing Associates.
When Canadian virtuoso Marc-André Hamelin visits Carnegie Hall, he usually plays downstairs in the sleek subterranean confines of Zankel Hall. However, Wednesday night's concert was on the big stage of Stern Auditorium. He offered a carefully curated program that explored many aspects of his art, including composition. Each half started simply and increased in difficulty, climaxing in works by Ravel and Liszt. 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

Concert Review: The Double Black Diamond

Marc-André Hamelin at Hunter College.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin gets in touch with nature.
Photo from Wikimedia Commons.
Any recital by Marc-André Hamelin, the extraordinary Canadian pianist and composer is a cause for celebration for piano lovers, drawn to his combination of sober musicianship and always-impressive technical skil. This Sunday, Mr. Hamelin appeared at the International Keyboard Institute and Festival, playing a challenging program of Liszt and Chopin along with Toward the Center, a large-scale modern composition by Yehudi Wyner, a contemporary American composer who has taught at Harvard, Yale and Brandeis.

Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Concert Review: When Two Fifths Make a Whole

The NJSO plays Beethoven, Beethoven and Beethoven.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Piano man: Marc-Andre Hamelin in rehearsal.
Photo provided by Hemsing Associates.
Sometimes when you look over a chronological listing of an upcoming classical music season, it is common to circle a certain performance and make a note of its date. One such performance took place Sunday afternoon at NJPAC's Prudential Hall, where Jacques Lacombe and the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra concluded their regular subscription season with a matinee concert focused exclusively on the music of Beethoven. (The orchestra has one more concert planned for next Sunday at NJPAC.)

Monday, February 23, 2015

Concert Review: The Virtuoso in Winter

Marc-Andre Hamelin plays the 92nd St. Y.
by Paul J. Pelkonen

Marc-André Hamelin. Photo by Sim Canetty Clark for Colbert Artists Management.

The annual appearance of Marc-Andre Hamelin in a solo piano recital is an occasion that few lovers of keyboard mosic would dare miss. Yet Saturday night's thick, wet snowstorm made travel to the 92nd St. Y a difficult endeavor for some. Those in attendance heard the acclaimed virtuoso play a varied program, featuring the music of Debussy, John Field and Liszt alongside one of his own compositions.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

The Superconductor Interview: A Taste for Complexity

A pianist in motion: Marc-André Hamelin.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin.
Photo by Sim Cannety Clarke © 2014 Hemsing Associates.
Among piano virtuosos, Marc-André Hamelin stands apart. The Canadian pianist and composer is known for his relentless exploration of the most challenging repertory of the instrument, bringing "lost" composers from the 19th century back into the public eye.

In New York to make his first subscription appearances with the New York Philharmonic, Mr. Hamelin graciously agreed to an interview while hurtling through the steel canyons of Manhattan in the back of a taxi. In these concerts, he is playing Cesar Franck's Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra a work that used to be frequently heard but is now regarded as an antique.

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Concert Review: The Exotic and the Forgotten


The New York Philharmonic plays Franck, Prokofiev and Julian Anderson.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Conductor Sir Andrew Davis led the New York Philharmonic this week.
Image © 2013 Glyndebourne Opera Festival.
The standard, stolid format of the modern symphony concert (an opening piece, a concerto and a symphony) was established some time in the 19th century. This week's subscription series at the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Sir Andrew Davis and featuring Canadian pianist Marc-Andre Hamelin followed that format, but drew its works from three very different historic eras.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Concert Review: The Keys to the Kingdom

Marc-André Hamelin returns to Zankel Hall.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin. Photo by Sim Canetty Clark for Colbert Artists Management.
Any recital by Marc-André Hamelin in New York City is greeted with eager, one would say even fevered anticipation by piano aficionados. Mr. Hamelin may not have the international fame of Yevgeni Kissin or Lang Lang. He has been invited (yet) to join Metallica onstage. But this artist has something more than virtuosity. He has musicianship--and a willingness to explore the difficult corners of the piano catalogue where other artists so often fear to tread.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Concert Review: The Man of Steel

Marc-André Hamelin at the 92nd Street Y.
by Paul J. Pelkonen
Marc-André Hamelin. Photo by Fran Kaufman © 2013 Marc-André Hamelin.com 
There's nothing conventional about Marc-André Hamelin. The Canadian-born pianist is an authentic virtuoso. His recitals combine fierce technical chops with in-depth explorations of the dark corners of the catalogue. For piano cognonscenti, they are nearly sacred events.

On Wednesday night at the 92nd St. Y's Kaufman Auditorium, Mr. Hamelin  started with the G Minor Organ Fantasia and Fugue of Johann Sebastian Bach. Playing a transcription by Theodor Szántó, Mr. Hamelin hammered out the chords, lending a thunderous weight to Bach's musical ideas. The fugue emerged from this turmoil, putting the work's ideas back in order before revealing the cosmic concepts written into Bach's figured bass.

The Sonatina Seconda by Ferruccio Busoni is that composer pushing the envelope with a leaden bump of pianistic complexity. Mr. Hamelin seemed to relish the bleak colors called forth in this music, grim, almost atonal fragments that coalesce into a dark, coherent whole. Playing with muscle and drive, he made the sound of the Steinway like a crack of thunder in the intimate space of Kaufmann Concert Hall.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Concert Review: The Godzilla Concerto

Spring For Music continues, with Marc-Andre Hamelin playing Busoni.
by Paul Pelkonen
If the Busoni concerto were a Japanese movie monster, this is who it would be.
Image of Godzilla (Gojira) © 1954 Toho Studios. Character of Godzilla is the property of Toho Studios.
The Spring For Music festival reached its midway point on Wednesday night at Carnegie Hall. Since the New Jersey Symphony Orchestra travelled the shortest distance to participate in this week of modern music, it was fitting that they chose the toughest program on the schedule: Nocturnal by Edgar Varese, Kurt Weill's obscure Symphony No. 1 (Berliner), and Ferruccio Busoni's gigantic Piano Concerto. The concert was music director Jacques Lacombe's Carnegie Hall debut

Among German composers of the early 20th century, Busoni (a German, despite the Italian name) is looked at as something of an evolutionary dead end, with few followers of his footsteps or much interest in his difficult ideas of a new musical language. With this concert, Mr. Lacombe sought to disprove that thesis: programming the Concerto with works by his students Kurt Weill and Edgar Varèse, composers who took very different musical paths.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Concert Review: Virtuoso, Underground

The piano hammers of Hamelin.
Photo © Hyperion Records/Marc-André Hamelin
Marc-André Hamelin in recital at Zankel Hall.
The French-Canadian pianist Marc-André Hamelin is one of the most prodigious exponents of 19th century keyboard repertory playing today. In a series of recordings for Hyperion, Mr . Hamelin has delved into the music of obscure composers like Alkan, Henselt and Godowsky, breathing new life into neglected works and playing them with technical flair and rich, emotional pianism. He has also written and recorded his own set of Etudes, expanding the repertory of virtuoso piano music and bringing works by these "lost" composers to the ears of the public.


Wednesday night featured Mr. Hamelin at Carnegie Hall's  Zankel Hall performance space, giving an intimate recital of works that spanned three centuries of knuckle-busting pianism. The program opened with Haydn's E Minor sonata, in a brisk reading that evoked the formal gardens and raked paths of Esterhazy, the country castle of Haydn's patron. Mr. Hamelin played with lyricism and light humor, evoking Haydn's personal warmth over the three movements.

Robert Schumann's Carnaval, a cycle of 21 piano pieces depicting the composer, his fiancee and their various associates, was played at an exhilerating speed. Listening to Mr. Hamelin play this music was like riding in a friend's car on a dark, twisty road at night, going at a dangerous clip but thrilled by the ride.

The second half of the evening began with the Ostinato by Stefan Wolpe, a 12-tone composition by this underrated modernist composer. Mr. Hamelin laid out the tone rows and proceeded to go to town in the harmonic development, adding layers of incredible complexity and showing the richness and variety that is possible with this complicated composing technique. This piece involved the most difficult piano playing of the evening, and Mr. Hamelin played with a fierce, fluent attack.


Mr. Hamelin then downshifted into a slower, more romantic mood for Gabriel Faure's Nocturne in d minor. Like Haydn, Faure is not known for his piano music, but this elegant Nocturne reveals that his music serves as an important bridge between the picturesque music of Saint-Säens and the impressionism of Debussy. Mr. Hamelin played with rich, elegaic phrasing, producing gentle tones that still required his formidable pianistic abilities.

After a short pause, Mr. Hamelin charged into the finale, giving a flashy, passionate performance of the "Reminiscences from Norma" by Franz Liszt, based on themes from the opera by Vincenzo Bellini. Liszt uses various themes from the opera as an opportunity for bravura display, adding repetitions and variations, arpeggiating chords and incorporating sweeping glissandos and difficult rhythms for the left hand.

For the most part, Liszt ignores "Casta Diva" (though you can hear it in a few bars) using the variations to cast brilliant new light on Bellini's work. Originally designed simply as a crowd-pleaser, Mr. Hamelin showed that there is depth and inspiration in Liszt's setting of this operatic masterwork, mining it for new musical material even as he made the upper part of the keyboard sing in a bel canto style.

The audience's appreciation was met a pair of stellar encores. First up, the Elegy from Turandot by Ferruccio Busoni. Although Turandot is a German setting of an Italian play set in China, Busoni chose to use this Elegy to experiment with the English folk-song "Greensleeves". He expands that simple tune into a dizzying set of variations, bending it into almost unrecognizable shape. Mr. Hamelin followed with Ondine, the first part of Ravel's Gaspard de la nuit. Before the performance, Mr. Hamelin confessed that he had not played this piecein front of an audiencce in many years. But judging from the reaction, the audience would have gladly stayed for Le Gibet and Scarbo as well.

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