photograph by Andrij Zelenyj |
Thanks for doing this, Ivan.
Your repertoire is mainly Romantic, isn’t it.
Yes, indeed,
I feel most comfortable to live in the XIXth century because I can find more
evidence about composer performance practice. It is quite difficult, in case
XVII/XVIIIth century music, because preserved information may be applied
differently, depends from many factors like available manuscripts, letters,
instruments, performer/listener perception, and as well we have less chance to
guess the composer’s intensions. With the composers of the XXIst century it is
even more difficult, because most of them are not performers, and sometimes may
hardly remember what they created several decades ago, and have no clear
vision, how their own music supposed to be played.
Often people call me a Romantic pianist, But I treat the music like one line of music evolution process without measuring for Baroque, Classical, Romantic. When did the Classical period start? from which sound/note of which composer? Was Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and Johann Christian Bach Baroque or Classical? Was Beethoven and Schubert Classical or Romantic? Somehow I feel that if Mozart rose from the grave and played for as today, we would treat him as romantic performer, but not Classical as we know "classical pianists" today. (of course we don’t know and will never know)
Do you play Bach or Mozart at all?
Often people call me a Romantic pianist, But I treat the music like one line of music evolution process without measuring for Baroque, Classical, Romantic. When did the Classical period start? from which sound/note of which composer? Was Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and Johann Christian Bach Baroque or Classical? Was Beethoven and Schubert Classical or Romantic? Somehow I feel that if Mozart rose from the grave and played for as today, we would treat him as romantic performer, but not Classical as we know "classical pianists" today. (of course we don’t know and will never know)
Do you play Bach or Mozart at all?
Yes, I do.
My first performance with RNCM Chamber Orchestra and Andre de Ridder was the
Mozart D major "Coronation" concerto. Unfortunately this concerto was
only partly completed by Mozart, and it boosts my creativity. How was I to
complete something that was in his brain but died with him? My solution was
quite easy, to create a Mozart cadenza and other missed parts, you need to take
the themes from the same concerto in D major and add the harmonic progressions
as well as characteristic patterns from other completed concertos, by Mozart of
course. The most difficult about "The Mozart " is: everybody has got
their "own" Mozart and critics may be rarely satisfied with the
performance result. The intention to interpret "Mozart" make his
music boring, and by all means, he was not! I've got five concertos in my
repertoire , and my favourite composition for solo piano is the Adagio from his
Sonata in F major, K 280 / 189e.
And Yes, I play Bach, or Bach's in plural.
The last project was "Bach and Sons" where the following concertos were performed with the chamber orchestra:
The last project was "Bach and Sons" where the following concertos were performed with the chamber orchestra:
Johann
Sebastian Bach,
Harpsichord Concerto No.5 in F minor, BWV 1056.
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Harpsichord Concerto in C minor, H.474.
Johann Christian Bach.
Harpsichord Concerto No.5 in F minor, BWV 1056.
Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach
Harpsichord Concerto in C minor, H.474.
Johann Christian Bach.
Unfortunately,
the Bach project overlapped with my Complete Liszt Etudes project and I was not
able to dedicate enough time to Bach as I wished. But in the case of Bach every
step is even more difficult than in case of Mozart. You have to be real master
of the basso continuo as well as ornaments, style, ancient instrument (if there
is any, I am saying that ironically because most old instruments were destroyed
by improvements in later years) and find and order the hand written manuscripts
from all around the world. Again, unfortunately our educational programmes in
higher music educational institutions are outweighed by some academic subjects
related to the music but not to piano performance. In my personal opinion and in
my student years, for me it would be more useful to study basso continuo, ornaments,
performance on historical instruments, historical recordings instead of some
operas in detail, general knowledge of which I have anyway. You have to be the
real master if you play Bach Goldberg variations with the repeats, and not sending
the audience to sleep. Today I pefer to play Bach in transcriptions of Siloti,
Busoni, Rachmaninoff or would rather transcribe the second movement of Johann
Christian Bach for solo piano myself. Both books of the Preludes and
Fugues where written for private music making at home for educational purposes.
What will you be adding when you next learn a new piece?
What will you be adding when you next learn a new piece?
Knowledge and Spirit!
You have studied and played with several very well-known names. Is there one, or two, musicians that you regard as your main influences?
Because of my respect to all human beings who may play the piano, and because my respect to all my teachers, I not to discuss people alive today.
Otherwise as follows:
Sergei Vasilyevich Rachmaninoff (1873–1943),
Ferruccio Dante Michelangiolo Benvenuto Busoni (1866–1924),
Josef Casimir Hofmann (1876 – 1957),
Joseph Arkadievich Levin (1874-1944).
You got a superb sound out of Chichester
cathedral’s Yamaha piano last year, as did Stephen Kovacevich last week. Is
there one piano you enjoy playing more than any other?
Thank you
very much for your kind words, it is indeed very kind of you! My concert
experience as well as the Yamaha piano at the Chichester cathedral last year
was very pleasant, and I miss your audience very much.
Pianos for
me are like a car built for a formula one racer.
Some of them will allow you to express yourself, some not, and to be honest, after 30 years of playing different pianos, I still can't manage some of them (mainly ancient ones).
Some of them will allow you to express yourself, some not, and to be honest, after 30 years of playing different pianos, I still can't manage some of them (mainly ancient ones).
Somehow it
happened that I've been related with Yamaha instruments like Franz Liszt with
Erard. The Yamaha Scholarship at the RNCM, CFX Grand presentation at One
Moorgate Place for Mifco LTD, even at home I've got Yamaha Grand and two
Upright pianos.
Personally,
I feel physical enjoyment from the piano action by playing instruments
from the last generation (1980's/1990's) of the Steinway with ivory keys. But
definitely not all of them and not necessarily the B or D models. In this
personal judgement I am more nostalgic about my youth, than about brand
specification. This type of the piano is for me like Boisselot was for Franz
Liszt.
Do you have a second instrument?
No, I've solely dedicated myself to play piano (there are so many of them!) in solo concerts, and sometimes with an orchestra but not "in" an orchestra. The life of pianist is too short, the repertoire huge, it is better to do something what you understand specifically, than to do a bit of everything but all average.
Do you have a second instrument?
No, I've solely dedicated myself to play piano (there are so many of them!) in solo concerts, and sometimes with an orchestra but not "in" an orchestra. The life of pianist is too short, the repertoire huge, it is better to do something what you understand specifically, than to do a bit of everything but all average.
Do you follow sport? Do you have a football
team you support?
Oh yes, the
piano competitions are always sport !!!
I am not listening to the performances, but making stakes because "nowadays" even the adjudicators on the panel after voting don't know how it happened. It is so fun to guess, if you know all the "back stage kitchen".
But because piano players are not machines and playing at the different concert halls with different live circumstances, my guesses are a bit more than half correct.
I am not listening to the performances, but making stakes because "nowadays" even the adjudicators on the panel after voting don't know how it happened. It is so fun to guess, if you know all the "back stage kitchen".
But because piano players are not machines and playing at the different concert halls with different live circumstances, my guesses are a bit more than half correct.
Football was
interesting for me in 1990's, but now with all "this" money, football
players lost the motivation to create "the art of game" like it was
in the days of Maradona (I guess?), and unfortunately I've lost any interest in
it.
Do you have any favourite pop music?
Yes, some of Queen, some of Scorpions, some of Abba, and of course soundtracks from Tomorrow never dies and Casino Royale.
Yes, some of Queen, some of Scorpions, some of Abba, and of course soundtracks from Tomorrow never dies and Casino Royale.
And, most importantly. You probably listen to
Record Review on a Saturday morning. I don’t tune into that until 11 o’clock
because I listen to Danny Baker on Radio 5 where he plays the Sausage Sandwich
Game with a guest. So, I offer you a sausage sandwich, a beautiful sausage
sandwich with juicy sausage in crusty bread, the butter all melting. What would
you choose to go on that, would you like red sauce, brown sauce or no sauce at
all.
I am afraid
not.
I am
listening BBC radio concerts and enormously respect BBC concert broadcasts, but
for the radio as an entertainment, I would rather clone BBC with Classic FM for
the better result. For me as for the listener, the BBC sometimes may be
overweighed by contemporary music. In this case, my soul cannot feel the music,
and my brain starts to protest in a struggle to understand the music.
The other extreme for me is to listen hundreds of times every day to the same "two notes" of cheesy music played by an emerging/rising talent/star. And in this case, my soul is sickened and my brain says that to create that type of music product, you need to have an exceptional PR team but not exceptional music ability.
The other extreme for me is to listen hundreds of times every day to the same "two notes" of cheesy music played by an emerging/rising talent/star. And in this case, my soul is sickened and my brain says that to create that type of music product, you need to have an exceptional PR team but not exceptional music ability.
And about
the sauce:
I love
everything new, and what I never tried. In this case I will mix both of them
red and brown. If the taste is disgusting, I will keep mixing them in
proportion until arriving at a satisfactory result. However, if for some
reasons I will have to stop mixing, and result will be still not satisfactory,
I will have it with no sauce at all.
Thanks, Ivan. You’ve been great. All the best.