In
the very crowded field of outstanding young pianists today (and getting more
crowded every year), there have been many recent performances that succeed in
impressing us with his or her pianistic prowess. Far more rare is a young
artist who moves us, not with technical wizardry (which he has plenty of), but
with depth, with artistry and musicality.
Such
an event took place in Vancouver yesterday, with the Canadian debut of Kuok-Wai
Lio, under the auspices of the Vancouver Recital Society. Mr. Lio played an
artistically and technically demanding programme of Janáček,
Schubert, and Schumann. I do not recall being so moved by a young pianist’s
playing since the first time I heard Ingrid Fliter many years back.
Mr. Lio began his recital daringly, with a performance of Leoš
Janáček’s four-movement piano cycle, In the Mists. Not being intimately acquainted with the piece, I can
only guess that the composer
named his work a “piano cycle” instead of “sonata” so that he didn’t feel bound
by any constraints of musical structure. Indeed the piece sounded very
free-flowing in its ideas, very colourful and beautiful, and highly
imaginative. I did detect the influence of other composers, most notably in his
use of harmony, which somehow reminded me of the harmonies Chopin used in some
of his later Mazurkas.
Kuok-Wai
Lio appears to be a quiet and unassuming young man, but from the first notes,
Lio mesmerized me with his playing. There is a luminous quality to the
sound he makes on the piano. Within minutes, I realized that I was in the
presence of a young master. The playing commanded our complete attention
without clamoring for it. Lio, I believe, is very much “his own man” in his
musical ideas.
Franz
Schubert’s Four Impromptus, D. 935, made up the final work of the first half.
Unlike many of today’s young keyboard titans, Lio took the time for the music
to develop. At the same time, the music never dragged, but flowed beautifully
and logically. The many transitions, in mood and in tempo, within each of the
four pieces were masterfully handled. Lio’s interpretation of these very
familiar pieces did not remind me of anyone else’s playing. His ideas were
completely original, but never idiosyncratic, and they made complete musical
sense. I believe Lio is one of those
rare artists who draw our attention to the music, and not to him or his
personality.
Lio’s
playing of Robert Schumann’s elusive Davidsbündlertänze,
Op. 6, once again reinforced my impression that we were in the presence of an
extremely rare talent. One of Schumann’s lesser played works, the piece has an
inner beauty that makes it very difficult to bring across. I believe it was
Busoni who said that a musician must, during a performance, lose and find
himself at the same time. From beginning to end, Lio was completely absorbed in
the shifting moods of Schumann’s sound world, a man completely lost within the
music, but at the same time seeing clearly the way before him. His playing of
the work’s two final sections (Wie aus der
Ferne; Nicht schnell) was meltingly and heartbreakingly beautiful.
After
repeated curtain calls from an enthusiastic audience, Lio rewarded us with the Aria from Bach’s Goldberg Variations, giving us a tantalizing taste of what a
performance of the complete work would be like.
No
amount of designer clothing or brand name runners can give young artists depth
and maturity. This young pianist already possesses such qualities in abundance.
In one article I read about Lio, conductor Donato Cabera, who worked with him, called him “an old soul”.
Hearing
his performance yesterday, that is exactly how I would describe Kuok-Wai Lio.