Lukasz Yoder and Roksana Zeinapur. |
REVIEW
Lukasz Yoder and Roksana Zeinapur: “The Interludes”, First Lutheran Church, Torrance
David J Brown
This wide-ranging recital in Classical Crossroads' Saturday afternoon "The Interludes" series was shared between the young Polish pianist Lukasz Yoder and the Russian-Azerbaijani soprano Roksana Zeinapur... and raised the sometime conundrum of appropriateness of venue. I wonder if I’m not alone in finding a coolly modern and spacious church like First Lutheran rather incongruous a setting for such hothouse mini-sagas in song—of love ironic, unrequited, or doomed—as they presented in the latter half of the program.
Erik Satie, around the time he wrote Je te veux. |
Kurt Weill in 1932. |
Youkali, adapted from the purely instrumental Tango habanera in Weill’s musical Marie Galante, also written in 1934, added a tang of Spanish/Cuban exoticism, while Speak Low, from the Broadway musical comedy One Touch of Venus (1943), was, indeed, pure Broadway.
So might one imagine the familiar These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You) to be, but in fact its music and lyrics were by two stalwarts of 1930s' English musical theatre, respectively Jack Strachey and Eric Maschwitz. Even in the large impersonal spaces of the church, the duo managed to achieve the confiding, intimate manner the song requires, and then executed a neat 90-degree turn into the rollicking defiance of Ángel Cabral’s La Foule (The Crowd), composed in 1936 but made famous by Edith Piaf over 20 years later.
Edith Piaf in 1948. |
Mr. Yoder had the stage to himself in the first half of the recital, opening with one of the most expansive—and familiar—of all of Bach’s “48”, the Prelude and Fugue No. 8 in E-flat minor BWV 853, from Book 1 of Das Wohltemperierte Clavier. Opening the lengthy Prelude softly, but thankfully keeping it moving, his sensitivity with its discreet rubato seemed a little undermined by some rhythmic and chording insecurity—unfamiliarity with the instrument and the venue, perhaps? However, allowing barely a pause between it and the Fugue, coupled with his spacious tempo for the latter, ensured that the whole majestic piece came across as a coherent whole.
Then, with probably intentional extreme contrast, he tore into Chopin’s thunderous “Octave” Étude No. 22 in B minor B78, Op. 25 No. 10, as con fuoco as you could wish for, demonstrating a formidable power indeed. Contrasting again was the same composer’s Nocturne No. 5 in F-sharp Major B55, Op. 15 No. 2 where, though Mr. Yoder couldn’t resist some unmarked accelerandi in the central Doppio movimento section, in the closing span particularly his playing was of positively liquid delicacy.
Grazyna Bacewicz. |
The first movement of her Piano Sonata No. 2 (1953) is dense and gritty, and characterized by extreme contrasts of texture and dynamic. Mr. Yoder gave full measure both to its grinding intensity and sudden moments of withdrawal and stasis. Indeed, my sole reservation was that only this introductory Maestoso-Allegro was programmed. I’m not a fan of extracting single movements from multi-movement works that composers clearly intend to be heard as a whole, and in this instance that view was born out by the choice of encore.
In place of the anticipated Chopin Mazurka, instead Mr. Yoder played this same Bacewicz Piano Sonata No. 2’s even more torrential Toccata finale, and frankly, I would have preferred one or two fewer songs if it had made room for him to play the whole work: the somber processional of its central Largo movement crucially separates, contrasts with, and expands the context for the outer movements. Maybe another time…?
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“The Interludes”: First Lutheran Church, Torrance, 3.00pm, Saturday, October 19, 2019.
Images: Lukasz Yoder: Artist website; Roksana Zeinapur: Artist website; Satie: Wikimedia Commons; Weill: Wikimedia Commons; Edith Piaf: Britannica; Bacewicz: National Digital Archives of Poland.
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Images: Lukasz Yoder: Artist website; Roksana Zeinapur: Artist website; Satie: Wikimedia Commons; Weill: Wikimedia Commons; Edith Piaf: Britannica; Bacewicz: National Digital Archives of Poland.
If you found this review to be useful, interesting, or informative, please feel free to Buy Me A Coffee!
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