David Green

David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I published booklets of my own poems. The original allocation of ISBN numbers is used up now, though. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become, often more about music than books and not so often about poems. It will be about whatever suggests itself.

Saturday, 20 January 2024

Angela Zanders and Mikhail Ledzkan in the Menuhin Room

 Angela Zanders and Mikhail Ledzkan, Menuhin Room, Portsmouth, Jan 20

By way of introducing an all-Rachmaninov programme, Angela Zanders read from a contemporary article in Grove's, 'the unsurpassed authority on all aspects of music', that amongst other things described his music as 'artificial, gushing'.
That's fine by me. All art is 'artificial', it just might sometimes choose to sound 'natural', and by all means we can all 'gush' a bit if we see fit. As Angela said, he remains very popular. We don't have to worry about that either. To re-work the famous quote about Wagner, music is as good as it sounds and the first few notes of Mikhail Ledzkan's cello in the Prelude, op. 2, announced all that we needed to know about the pleasure of being back for a further year of the Menuhin Room series. I'm sure he could play the telephone directory and make it sing.
The Prelude didn't gush but grew gently to a considered lyricism and then without Mikhail, Angela played another for piano, op. 23 no. 4 which was loosely redolent of the Fauré Berceuse, perhaps, again extending towards something more rhapsodic. 
Not everything needs to be in top gear but the programme moved through a few to arrive at the main feature, the Sonata in G minor, op. 19. The early activity was more on the tumbling array of notes on the keyboard while the cello did what it is best at in contrasting longer lines. I do have a question for all ensemble performers about how much they rehearse together because in some cases I think it might be surprisingly little but the expertise of performers like these doesn't let it show.
The Allegro scherzando is almost panic-stricken with its powerful theme emerging from amidst the agitato and the cello moving through its range of available effects but this is a 'large-scale' work even if for only two instruments. The Andante was given an impassioned hearing before the Allegro mosso finale was dramatic, energized and a triumphant finish to a glorious performance from two who are already Menuhin Room stalwarts and very much part of the foundations that Andrew McVittie has built his fine series.
Perhaps we should all be artificial and gushing. And I mean that most sincerely.
 

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