This is the debut disc 
                of a pianist who, incredibly, is yet 
                to celebrate his eighteenth birthday. 
                Chinese-born Wen-Yu Shen has been based 
                in Germany for some years, and first 
                came to prominence in Europe last June 
                when he gained second prize in the Queen 
                Elisabeth piano competition in Brussels. 
                He won extravagant praise on that occasion 
                for his maturity and stunning technical 
                mastery in a wide range of music. 
              
 
              
In that sense, this 
                issue does not disappoint; Shen can 
                hardly be accused of playing safe for 
                his first CD, for he has chosen a programme 
                which, as well as being monstrously 
                challenging from a technical point of 
                view, is also stylistically diverse, 
                from the late romantic Rachmaninov to 
                the decidedly unromantic, or even anti-romantic 
                Stravinsky. If he is more successful 
                in the former than the latter, that 
                is not to say that his Stravinsky is 
                without merit. It simply calls for a 
                kind of discipline which he may yet 
                need to strive for (thank heavens this 
                amazing youngster is going to have to 
                strive for something!). 
              
 
              
The Rachmaninov Sonata 
                is given a powerful performance. If 
                the finale is the most involving section, 
                then that is probably because it contains 
                the best music in the sonata. Certainly, 
                Shen launches the fireworks in a spectacular 
                way, and the torrents of bravura figuration 
                hold no fears for him – every semiquaver 
                as clear as a bell. Though he is not 
                quite so convincing in the slow movement 
                – and that’s true also of the three 
                op. 32 Preludes that follow – he is 
                by no means prosaic or insensitive, 
                and balances the delicate textures of 
                the Preludes with precocious mastery. 
              
 
              
The issue in the Stravinsky 
                is mainly a rhythmic one. Shen is superb 
                in the impressionistic music of Chez 
                Petrouchka (the scene in the central 
                puppet-character’s cell) and in the 
                high jinks of the Shrove-Tide Fair. 
                But the opening Danse Russe finds 
                him indulging in a rhythmic rubato 
                which would surely have infuriated Stravinsky. 
                This music depicts the mechanical movements 
                off the three puppets, and must have 
                an appropriately machine-like inflexibility 
                of pulse to it if the style of the music, 
                so typical of its composer, is not to 
                be misrepresented. Back to the drawing-board 
                – or at least the metronome – for that 
                one! 
              
 
              
The disc is completed 
                by a glittering performance of one of 
                the Rachmaninov Etude-Tableaux, and 
                an equally brilliant one of his arrangement 
                of le Vol du Bourdon (otherwise 
                known as The Flight of the Bumble 
                Bee!). Despite my reservations about 
                the Stravinsky, this is a very fine 
                and, in many ways remarkable disc. Shen’s 
                playing (on A Steinway type D) has been 
                perfectly captured by the Cyprès 
                recording engineers. 
              
Gwyn Parry-Jones