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SEEN
AND HEARD NEWS ARTICLE
Ivan
Ilić Tours
Wales
in March with
a new work by John Metcalf (MS)
For
his first tour of Wales award-winning star of the Paris music
scene Ivan Ilić decided to alter his programme and include a solo
piano piece by Welsh composer John Metcalf.
Such was the audience’s response Ivan not only performed Metcalf’s
Endless Song across
Wales but
played the work 45 times in the last year including concerts in
France, Ireland, England and Scotland.
Now the virtuoso pianist, who studied mathematics
and music at the
University
of California, Berkeley, is to give the premiere of a new work by
Metcalf, at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama in March.
Ivan met John Metcalf after a concert in Fishguard in the spring
of 2007 which in itself was the start of a special relationship
with the country. “That concert was part of my first tour of
Wales, and at the time I had no idea that I would play 25 concerts
in Wales in the 12 months to follow,” said the 29-year-old
performer who has Serbian parents but was born and raised in
California.
As a student Ivan was awarded a Premier Prix in piano at the
Conservatoire Supérieur de Paris. Aged 20, he launched a solo
recital career that has taken him throughout Europe and America
and most recently extensive touring in Wales, Ireland, Scotland
and England. “For my Welsh debut last February I shifted the
repertoire and played
Endless
Song
as an encore. The public's reaction was the most demonstrative I
have encountered for any piece by a living composer at one of my
concerts.
Initially, I
thought that the hymn-like, pastoral qualities of
Endless
Song
were particularly resonant for Welsh concertgoers, but I soon
played the piece in France, Scotland, England, and Ireland where
it received an overwhelmingly positive reaction.”
With both
audience and critical approval ringing in his ears, Ivan was keen
to have a companion piece to
Endless
Song
“something in a brisk tempo to provide an obvious contrast with
Endless Song”. The new work,
Appassionata
is the result.
“Last autumn
I stayed with John near Lampeter to work on the piece. We listened
to several recordings of his orchestral music, and I was
particularly taken with his
Cello
Symphony
especially
the mysterious opening, which starts in the very low registers,
and builds into a compelling, beautifully lyrical melody.
At
the time, John was trying out various ideas for the opening of
Appassionata.
The opening he eventually decided upon is very similar in
character and construction to that of his
Cello
Symphony,
although compressed into 20 seconds. I like to think that the
decision was made as a result of my enthusiastic response to the
parallel passage in his
Cello
Symphony.
Looking at
Appassionata
under a microscope, I also see similarities to
Endless Song:
the pacing of the music, the long lines, the use of the full scope
of the keyboard, and even the voicings of individual chords.”
Ivan is
convinced the work will become a firm favourite of concert goers.
“I feel that it is doubly appropriate that it will receive its
premiere at the Royal College in Cardiff: firstly because of the
college's commission, and secondly because John is one of Wales'
foremost living composers. I imagine that in years to come
students at the college will study and later perform
Appassionata as a tribute to their Welsh heritage. Along with
Endless Song it is one of the most successful pieces for solo
piano by a Welsh composer.”
This will be Ivan’s first recital at the college which will also
include
Endless
Song
and works by Debussy and Liszt, and it will be followed by a
master class. Ivan will also perform the new piece when he returns
to Aberdovey
later in the
spring in a concert sponsored by Night Out, the
touring scheme run by the Arts Council of Wales and Gwynedd
Council.
My tour of
Wales last year including Aberdovey was further proof that
nothing can replace the experience of going to a live performance;
the expression on the faces of audience members was transformed by
the end of each concert,” he said.
Speaking of his pleasure at having Appassionata played by Ivan
Ilic, Welsh composer John Metcalf said that
working
with Ivan Ilić was an opportunity he was happy to grasp with both
hands when creating the new work Appassionata.
Having heard
Ivan play Endless Song at the West Wales Arts Centre
in Fishguard and with an open commission to write a new work for
the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama, John realised the
collaborative possibility that presented itself.
The composer was considering the possibility of the RWCMD
commission being a test piece for the Newport Piano Competition
and therefore beyond his own keyboard skills. “When writing a
piece that involves virtuosic performance, a display piece, it was
very, very helpful to have collaborated with Ivan,” said
Welsh-Canadian John who now lives near Llanfair Clydogau, Lampeter.
Valuing working with an artist when creating a new piece is
something John ascribes to his love for writing opera. He
has now composed six, two of which were commissioned by
Welsh National Opera, and has given himself the goal of writing
five in his 80s (in 20 years time).
“Opera is a form that is immensely complex and a multi-faceted
medium; I learned to take advent of the best skills of people I am
working with. In between opera projects, when I was writing
instrumental pieces and chamber music, there was an opportunity to
collaborate I took it with both hands. I was very flattered when
Ivan said he thought Endless Song and Appassionata
were similar because often the word that goes before ‘display
piece’ is ‘empty’ and Endless Song is certainly not an
empty piece; I didn’t want to write one. When they heard I
was writing the piece, a couple of trusted colleagues said that
would be interesting as they didn’t think it was the sort of
challenge you would want as a composer. So, yes, I am delighted
Ivan thinks it sounds like my music and I take it as a very
favourable comment.”
John said the challenge was also encouraged by the college’s head
of keyboard studies Richard McMahon. “In conversation Richard
commented that it would be good if I wrote that kind of piece
because when you have singing melody in the context of virtuosity
it is very moving. It is like having deep feeling in a context of
comedy: the comedy is the virtuosity and the feeling is the
singing melody.” Regarding Appassionata’s similarities with his
previous work, he added, “As a composer I think it is like
family resemblances – if you are a member of the family you can’t
see them.”
Mike Smith
·
Royal Welsh
College of Music and Drama, Cardiff, 1.05 pm, (master class
2.30-5pm), March 14. Recital £4, £2. Master class free. Tel: 029
2039 1391
· Neuadd Dyfi , Aberdovey. 7:30pm Sunday, April 20. £4.00 Concessions Children £3.00 Tel: 01654 767251
