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The
Times, 23 marzo 1999
recensione del concerto
dell’ 8 marzo
Albert G. Storace, Malta
BRILLIANT ITALIAN GUEST PIANIST
This month's MCI recital was once more in collaboration with the Italian
Cultural Institute and made possible the special guest appearance of
a young but very accomplished pianist. Adalberto Riva tapped a wide
spectrum of styles during this quite revealing recital. He began with
two contrasting and brief works by Domenico Scarlatti. Tranquillity
and delicacy of touch marked the Sonata in F sharp minor K. 25, offset
by the sheer brightness and well articulated Sonata in G major K. 201.
Strangely enough this did not elicit much reponse from the audience;
one perhaps is more taken to externally more showy pieces. Some, not
all, because there was much to appeal to the mind and senses later on.
In the meantime, a delightful piece, never performed locally to my knowledge,
was Rossini's very evocative Un petit train de plaisir. One of his very
mature "sins of his old age". Full of wit, humor and description,
what at one point seemed to sound like the dropping of a few notes and
a certain lack of rhythmic cohesion was only evocative of a temporary
derailing of the chugging machine !
Equally novel were the two Petrassi Invenzioni ns. 1 and 2, a sobering
academic exercise in which other aspects of the pianist's considerable
technique were manifest.
Ending the first half was a stylish interpretation on Clementi's Sonata
in B flat Major, op. 47 n. 2. By then the pianist had established a
warm rapport with the increasingly appreciative audience who were regaled
to a brilliant second half.
It began, and ended, with Liszt. In between there was the combined robust
qualities and mellifluos lyricism of Chopin's Scherzo n. 3, op. 39.
Preceding it, Liszt's Venezia e Napoli was a very effective musical
travelogue first evoking Venice, with, at its base, a gently rollicking
rhythm akin to a barcarolle, reserving for Naples not only the atmosphere
created by a fiery tarantella but also the essentially romantic nature
of Neapolitan song.
The sheer implications of Après une lecture de Dante, fantasia
quasi sonata are taxing and stressing. They stretch the listener's understanting
and concentration. How much greater it must be for the performer who
in this piece showed that very ability to bring this piece and its very
inspiration to life. I have heard few other interpretations capable
of matching this one. It was simply gret in sum total.Remaining with
Liszt, Adalberto Riva performed as encores two of great Magyar's transcriptions
of Schubert's lieder, Whohin? and Auf dem Wasser zu singen.
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