Nobuyuki Tsujii at White Nights 
          Pyotr Ilyich TCHAIKOVSKY (1840-1893) 
          Piano Concerto No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 23 (1875) [36:15] 
          November from 
The Seasons, Op. 37a (1876) [4:30] 
          
Sergei RACHMANINOV (1873-1943) 
          Prelude in G sharp minor, Op. 32, No. 12 (1910) [2:57] 
          
Nobuyuki TSUJII (b. 1988) 
          Elegy for the Victims of the Earthquake and Tsunami of March 11, 2011 
          (2011) [5:29] 
          
Dmitri SHOSTAKOVICH (1906-1975)* 
          Symphony No. 14, Op. 135 (1969) [50:50] 
          Nobuyuki Tsujii (piano); Olga Sergeyeva (soprano)*; Yuri Vorobiev (bass)* 
          
          Mariinsky Theatre Orchestra/Valery Gergiev 
          rec. live, Concert Hall of the Mariinsky Theatre, St. Petersburg, Russia, 
          8 July 2012 
          
EUROARTS 2059354 
 
          [110:00] 
 
         Much has already been written about the remarkable 
          young Japanese pianist, Nobuyuki Tsujii who was born blind. He made 
          his concert debut at age 12 and went on to win the 2009 Van Cliburn 
          international piano competition. His career took off from there. On 
          this concert recording he tackles that “rite of passage” 
          - as Katrin Haase indicates in her notes to the Blu-ray disc - Tchaikovsky’s 
          First Piano Concerto. 
            
          According to the title of this disc, the concert took place at the “White 
          Nights” Festival in St. Petersburg during June and July when the 
          sun never seems to set. The venue is the rather gaudy Mariinsky Theatre 
          which appears to be brightly lit. Conductor Gergiev guides Tsujii to 
          the piano and the concert begins with little ado by the majestic horns 
          and crashing piano chords of the Tchaikovsky concerto. Tsujii looks 
          young for his age and has fairly slender hands and long fingers. His 
          performance is one of both power and delicacy, not as volatile as some, 
          say Martha Argerich (but no one comes close to her in that department). 
          Coordination with Gergiev under normal circumstances would seem difficult, 
          but Tsujii is truly amazing here given the fact he cannot see! Gergiev 
          conducts without a baton in this work with his trademark fluttery fingers 
          and frequently looks over his shoulder at Tsujii. For the large part 
          they are very much together and only on the rare occasion is an attack 
          a bit ragged. The cameras focus on the keyboard, as they should, and 
          when they turn to the orchestra more times than not it is to the woodwinds 
          that our brought to the viewers’ attention. One would like to 
          see other sections of the orchestra more often and occasionally a shot 
          of the whole orchestra. Nonetheless, watching Tsujii and Gergiev excel 
          in this concerto is reward enough. 
            
          After the concerto, Tsujii plays the Rachmaninov Prelude in G sharp 
          minor as his first encore. He has a wonderful touch and brings out the 
          lyricism of the music sensitively. He then announces to the audience 
          in English (with “Good Evening” and words of thanks in Russian) 
          that his next encore will be his own composition, an Elegy for the Victims 
          of the Earthquake and Tsunami. The piece itself is tuneful, if rather 
          old-fashioned, and goes on a bit too long, even though it is heartfelt. 
          The audience is very appreciative and won’t let Tsujii go until 
          he performs a third encore. His last encore is the “November” 
          or “troika” movement from Tchaikovsky’s piano cycle 
          
The Seasons. He captures the simplicity of the piece perfectly, 
          and the first half of the concert ends. 
          
          It might seem a bit strange to conclude a concert celebrating White 
          Nights with one of Shostakovich's bleakest works, his Fourteenth Symphony 
          for soprano, bass, strings and percussion. This, a song cycle of eleven 
          poems on death by the non-Russian poets Lorca, Apollinaire, and Rilke, 
          and the Russian Küchelbecker, is sung in Russian. The subject matter 
          may be dark, but these settings contain some of the most eloquent music 
          Shostakovich composed near the end of his life as his health was deteriorating. 
          He dedicated the work to his good friend, Benjamin Britten. The songs 
          are sung here by two members of the Mariinsky Theatre, who have taken 
          solo roles in recent years. The soprano, Olga Sergeyeva is a tall blonde 
          who is commanding both physically and vocally, although her diction 
          is not ideally clear. She has a tremendous range and superb control 
          of dynamics. The bass, Yuri Vorobiev, has a slightly rotund figure and 
          a rich voice to match. He also characterizes his selections well and 
          can be better understood than she throughout. However, this is one case 
          where subtitles would be helpful, and the booklet accompanying the disc 
          contains no texts. Gergiev conducts with what looks like a toothpick, 
          but orchestra and soloists seem to follow him with positive results. 
          I am glad to have encountered this wholly idiomatic interpretation, 
          even though it does not in any way replace my CD with Galina Vishnevskaya 
          and Mark Reshetin as soloists, and Mstislav Rostropovich conducting 
          members of the Moscow Philharmonic for an experience of real intensity. 
          That is a studio recording and recorded more closely, resulting in greater 
          clarity of the texts. One can compensate with this Blu-ray by watching 
          the singers mouth the words, though Sergeyeva barely opens her mouth 
          at times. 
            
          The recorded sound is exemplary with excellent balance between soloists 
          and orchestra and the video is crystal clear. There are no extras with 
          the disc except a rather long trailer of Martha Argerich at the Verbier 
          Festival that is indeed enticing. The booklet notes, while generally 
          satisfactory in describing the works and a brief background of Nobuyuki 
          Tsujii, do not even mention the two vocalists. The writer, Katrin Haase, 
          however, makes a hash of discussing Rachmaninov’s preludes. The 
          prelude in this concert is from the Opus 32 of 1910 where Haase claims 
          it was published in 1903. The preludes of Op. 23, rather than 32, were 
          published in 1903. Earlier she states that a year after Rachmaninov 
          completed his composition class in 1891 he “wrote his famous 
Prelude 
          No. 12 in G sharp minor, Op. 32, which would bring the composer 
          fame throughout his life.” The prelude the writer is referring 
          to is not the one Tsujii is performing here, but the 
Prelude in C 
          sharp minor, Op. 3, No. 2 that every budding pianist knows and that 
          the composer grew tired of playing because he was constantly being requested 
          to perform it. 
            
          
Leslie Wright  
          
          Masterwork Index: 
Shostakovich 
          Symphony 14 ~~ 
Tchaikovsky 
          Piano concerto 1