Archive for August, 2011

marc-andre hamelin in london

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

I am currently in London for work, attending DrupalCon.  I had hoped to see Emanuel Ax play a Brahms piano concerto at the Proms but it was sold out and things just didn’t work out.  Last night I was wanting to see Marc-André Hamelin’s Proms performance.  We ended up getting free transportation and tickets to Batman Live and I was afraid it was going to trip up my plans.  According to the pamphlet the Proms is “THE WORLD’S GREATEST CLASSICAL MUSIC FESTIVAL,” is “in its 117th season” and spans “90 concerts over 58 days.”  It really is like nothing I have seen before.  I guess the closest would be the Gina Bachauer concerts that I used to attend, but for me, really there is little comparison.  As a classical music fan looking in, the Proms seems pretty awesome.

Perhaps the Royal Albert Hall had something to do with it.

Royal Albert Hall

A little while ago I watched a clip of Evgeny Kissin playing in a, I thought, kind of strange setting where the piano was placed amid the audience with audience members sitting a few feet away.  Pretty sure it was the Royal Albert Hall.

A coworker went with me, we bought tickets for sixteen pounds and sat in box seats.  At first, I thought, “man this guy is awful, didn’t dress up and the composition is even worse.”

piano tuner

Turns out that was the piano tuner.

A man introduced the performance and mentioned that this was the only Proms solo piano recital this year.  I thought that rather amazing.  I mean who doesn’t like a piano recital?  Apparently much of London.  Perhaps it is unfair to compare, but Batman Live had quite a few more attendees that the performance.  It looked to us like the hall was maybe a third filled and that’s not counting the upper sections which were almost entirely empty.

Tonight’s program was in honor of the 200th anniversary of Liszt’s birth.  I thought the program a touch obscure.  Based on Spotify and Rhapsody I would say the program was arranged in order of obscurity.  Between Spotify and Rhapsody I found one recording of Legend No. 2, ‘St Francis of Paola Walking on the Water’ and just a few of Fantasia and Fugue on B-A-C-H with most of them being on the organ.  The third piece (Benediction de Dieu dans la solitude) turned not as rare as I might have thought.  It appeared generally as part of its larger set.  The last set of pieces (Venezia e Napoli) is pretty common as it is from the Années de pèlerinage.

Guess I have seen some pretty great pianists live in my day, including Vladimir Feltsman and Martha Argerich but I would have to put Hameln in that class.  I have been playing the piano a bit of late and working on playing relaxed and with minimal effort which I find quite difficult.  Generally I could see Hamelin’s left hand and even in the most difficult of passages it just looked effortless.  Like he could play octaves for hours.  Fwiw, maybe one of the most amazing things I have experienced was a series of I think fifteen piano recitals covering the works of Bach performed in not many more than fifteen days by Father Sean Duggan.  I just checked and somehow Rhapsody and Spotify have never heard of him.

I have a cd or two of Hamelin playing and in the past I thought he generally played impossibly hard pieces, some of which he composed or arranged.  Like his work on the Liszt and Chopin etudes where he in my reading made them much harder.  You know since La Campanella and the like are so easy.  Kind of like Liszt but more showy, maybe Liszt++.  After hearing the program and listening to some youtube recordings tonight I will have to revisit Hamelin a bit.

I found Hamelin amazingly musical.  I could not believe the grace with which he played.  The Paola Walking on the Water piece (which I had only previously heard in preparation for this event) had a rather crazy left hand and the melody just sang through.  Sang.  And at times so softly.  Elsewhere, regardless of what else was going on I could clearly hear the B-A-C-H motive throughout the piece.

We had a pretty good shot of the piano internals and I don’t know that I saw a stray hammer raised.  The hammers lifted in isolation.  I just mean that Hamelin seemed to be very exact in his playing.  Now I didn’t have as good a view when I saw Argerich or really many pianists play, but I thought I would at least occasionally see the stray hammer, but I don’t think I ever did.  For sure didn’t hear stray hammers hitting the strings, I am saying didn’t even see a stray hammer raised.

Hamelin played a couple encores and the first seemed familiar but the second wasn’t so much.  I hate to say it, but I was hoping he’d break out one of his Liszt etude arrangements.  I wonder if Hamelin has tired of playing super crazy technical pieces like Alkan or the cadenza at the end of this hungarian rhapsody.  I wonder if other concert pianists have a hard time relating to Hamelin because of his rather transcendent technique.  Not that Lang Lang, Arcadi Volodos, Kissin and the like are slouches but can they really keep up with Hamelin in his prime?

The Proms sells standing tickets for five pounds on the day of the concert, so even for sold out events, you might be able to get in.  You can see some folks standing right next to the piano, and yeah, they were there as Hamelin played.  Maybe five feet away?  So yes, pretty sure the Kissin I saw was at Royal Albert Hall.

I hate to say that it saddened me that there was only one solo piano program for the Proms, it was performed by a world class pianist, it was in a world class venue in a pretty awesome town, tickets were at most sixteen pounds and the venue was largely empty.  The concert started at ten p.m. and perhaps the relative obscurity of the program contributed.  And did I mention the thousands of people at Batman Live?  Face value of our free Batman Live tickets was twenty-seven pounds fifty.

While I’m here I should mention that while for me Batman Live was perhaps a touch pedestrian there was this
screen or something used as a backdrop that handled scene changes.  It was pretty dang slick.  I think such a thing could revolutionize the industry, but guess we’ll see.  It spanned the back part of the stage, looked pretty much like a huge high definition monitor and had a hole in the center that folks walked through.

Back in the day, like twenty years ago I thought I could make it as a concert pianist.  Course I wasn’t really any good and I didn’t really have any idea about the music world, but wow, really what chance do folks have to make it as performers if this concert got that sort of turn out?  I guess the nights featuring concertos have been selling out.  It might not work out, but think I will try to get standing tickets for the sold out Saturday night concert which features rather well-known works by Mozart and Beethoven.  I am betting Royal Albert Hall is even more magical when sold out.

(picture taken several minutes before the concert started)

We got back to the hotel about 12:30 and thought the train station looked pretty cool.  Almost looks like it is daytime to me.  I have to give a shout out to my Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS10.  It took all the pictures featured in this post, pretty well all of them in quite low-light conditions.

Edited to add: there’s a recording of the concert over on the BBC website.  Thanks to the crosseyed pianist for the link.

invention no 13

Saturday, August 13th, 2011

For years I have learned piano pieces, got them to a hopefully decent level and performed recitals of said pieces.  My problem was that getting 45-60 minutes of pretty difficult music up to snuff all at the same time was a little beyond me, so I generally wasn’t pleased with the results.  I generally don’t have good recordings of me playing anything, or really any recordings.  My idea is to still learn pieces and likely give (shorter) recitals, but along the way, I will write a piano blog where I embed a (reasonably) high-quality youtube video and write a bit about the piece.  I am thinking that the project will merge a few of my interests, including performing music, writing, video recording, audio recording and video editing.

To kind of get out of the gate I needed a shorter piece and chose Bach’s invention no 13.  A couple months ago I started taking rather regular piano lessons for the first time in oh, fifteen or so years.  I wanted to try a new teacher and see if I could get some help getting pieces up to snuff to aid in my piano blog project.  To date I have mostly played the left hand of first appearance of the fugue from Beethoven’s op 110 sonata.  For the first time ever, I have actually memorized the left hand of a fugue and can play the left hand alone.  That may not sound like much, but it is to me.  Op 110 is one of my favorite pieces ever and it would have been a fine project-launching piece, but alas, it is a bit long and it might be awhile before even the fugue to the end is ready for performance.  My teacher also suggested that there were aspects of my piano performance that needed some improvement and perhaps there was an easier fugue that I could work with to improve the aspects.  I suggested the seemingly most popular classical piece in the world invention no 13.

Not moonlight sonata, Beethoven’s ninth, eine kleine nachtmusik or who knows what, but invention no 13.  I guess the world likes short pieces, pieces performed quickly and yes pieces performed by Glenn Gould.  Now it might be that the Classical Sampler is not arranged by popularity, but I find it interesting that pretty well regardless of criteria, invention no 13 tops the list.  Also interesting that Johann Sebastian Bach is the top artist.  Funny, I haven’t heard him play much of late.

I was introduced to invention no 13 some few years ago in high school.  My down the street neighbor I think played it and I found it interested.  It seemed hard and maybe a touch dark, maybe just because of the minor key.  Over the years I have got the piece back but probably never really to a great level, certainly I had never actually memorized the left hand by itself.  I think there is something kind of beautiful about the simplicity of the inventions, that there are only two voices and that Bach limited the pieces to two pages.  I am currently listening to the St. Matthew Passion and find it remarkable that it was written by the composer of the inventions.

This time through I realized just how hard it is to play the invention note perfect without cracks.  Funny that I used to think A Minor would make a piece easier because of no sharps or flats in the key signature.  Now I think it rather hard because of all the white notes.  This invention has many white notes.  And yes, it does require a left hand with pretty decent technique.

I had a few goals for my video

  • have a pretty good performance
  • use two cameras
  • have pretty good audio
  • have pretty good video
  • have audio and video synced
Really, that was about all.  I mostly wanted to get something on the board and figured I could be iterative, hopefully improving along the way.  I shot video with my Canon HF G10, Panasonic Lumix DMC ZS10, recorded audio with my Zoom H4N, synced with pluraleyes and edited with Adobe Premiere CS5.5.  The process was new to me, but I found some nice tutorials that helped me through.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k_iNlEs7GD0

I thought it went pretty well but wasn’t real pleased with the lighting, especially from the Panasonic.  I must say that the Canon HF G10 is a rather amazing camera.  So, here is another version with I think better lighting.  I tried adjusting the colors and things got totally bleached out, so I guess I can continue to iterate 🙂

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzEc9P7KsHw

I should say that I had a piano lesson on Wednesday and my teacher pretty well has me starting from scratch.  These videos are kind of the before, and I would like to put up the after in a month or two as I change fingerings, touch and the like.

Some areas of improvement include

  • better lighting and colors
  • a camera that moves (looking for volunteers 🙂 )
  • an overhead camera
  • getting closer to 144, which is a ways off from the current 96ish
Enjoy!
Earl