• CREATE AN ACCOUNT
  • LOG.IN
  • CONTENTS
  • CLASSIFIEDS
  • ARCHIVE
  • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US

  • Home
  • News
    • News Main Page
    • NewsFlash
  • A&E
    • A&E Main Page
    • Movie Times
    • TV Listings
    • A&E Blog
    • Art Galleries
    • Best Bets
  • Opinion
    • Opinion Main Page
    • Endorsements
    • Blogs
    • Columns
    • Voices
    • Letters
    • In Memoriam
    • Obituaries
  • Events
    • Today
    • Search
    • Submit
    • Best Bets
  • Living
    • Living Main Page
    • Outdoors
    • Travel
    • Sports
    • Peeps
  • Food & Drink
    • Food & Drink Main Page
    • All Restaurants
    • Delivery
    • All Bars & Clubs
    • Drink Specials
    • Open Now
  • Sports
  • Outdoors
    • Outdoors Main Page
    • Outside Insider
    • Spotlight On
    • Features
  • Classifieds
    • Real Estate
    • Jobs
    • Autos
  • Obits

    Yuja Wang Plays Hahn Hall, April 8

    Young Pianist Achieves Greatness


    Thursday, April 16, 2009
    By Charles Donelan
    Article Tools
    Print friendly
    E-mail story
    Tip Us Off
    iPod friendly
    Comments
    Bookmark This
    del.icio.us. del.icio.us.
    Digg! Digg!
    furl furl
    google google
    newsvine newsvine
    reddit reddit
    technorati technorati
    Facebook Facebook
    Yahoo! My Web 2.0 Yahoo!

    Yuja Wang may be just 22 years old, but her playing at this concert awakened nearly a century’s worth of sleeping piano giants.

    She opened with four short, one-movement sonatas by Domenico Scarlatti. These brilliant miniatures are well-known tests of skill that are forever marked by the genius of Vladimir Horowitz, who, with his dazzling speed and powerful virtuosity, first made them world famous almost 90 years ago. It was as if Wang had chosen them to imply that a new golden age of the keyboard has arrived. Her runs were brilliant and without showboating, her technique was precise, and the tone remained carefully controlled throughout, a vehicle for expression rather than an attention-getting disguise. Elegant in a bright red gown, Yang appeared to be lost in the music, and then, immediately after the piece and amid rapturous applause, understandably had trouble finding the hidden door that offers exit from Hahn Hall’s stage.

    Yuja Wang went deep into Scarlatti, Brahms, Chopin, and Stravinsky.
    Click to enlarge photo

    Paul Wellman

    Yuja Wang went deep into Scarlatti, Brahms, Chopin, and Stravinsky.

    The failed exit turned out well for everyone concerned, as it sent Wang back into the music almost without a pause; she simply sat back down and began the Brahms. Johannes Brahms’s Variations on a Theme by Paganini, Op. 35 is another instantly recognizable staple from the great modern era of the recital, and Wang made it as thrilling as though it were being played for the very first time. The mad, death-defying tempo with which she attacked left the audience slack-jawed. But that was only the beginning, as each section revealed another layer to this shimmering, multifaceted account. Without altering the piece’s fundamentals in the slightest, Wang nevertheless reinvented its sound and impact for a new century. In a program full of excellent playing, this was the evening’s outstanding highlight.

    After the interval, Wang returned, this time in a blue gown, for works by Frédéric Chopin and Igor Stravinsky. Chopin’s Piano Sonata in B-flat Minor, Op. 35 contains the familiar “Funeral March” as its third movement, and is one of the most recognizable compositions in the history of Western music. Again, Wang brought lightening speed, dexterity, and huge dynamics into the service of her idiosyncratic, sidelong interpretation. If it worked perhaps less well than the Brahms, that is still leaving room for it to have been quite brilliant, which it was. The Stravinsky that followed, Three Movements from Petrushka, gave Wang yet another opportunity to dazzle, and left the audience wanting more, which she gave in the form of a tender operatic encore.

    Related Links

    • More Classical articles
    Story Help (Click-ability)
    Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

    Comments

    Discussion Guidelines

    Post a comment

    Username:
    Password: (Forgotten your password?)

    Comment:

    EVENT CALENDAR

    Previous Month | Next Month

    Today's Events Best Bets Submit an Event

    Local Weather

    Currently:
    Clear Sky
    Temperature:
    53.1°
    Wind:
    3 N

    Surf Report
    • Specials
    • InPrint
    • Top Emails
    • Best Of 2009
    • 2009 Election Coverage
    • Wedding Guide 2009
    • Blue Green Guide 2009
    • SBIFF 2009
    • Tea Fire 2008
    • Local Heroes 2008
    • Calendar of Fundraisers
    • Local Bands
    • Within the Syuxtun Story Circle
    • Camellia Sasanqua
    • Whole New Ballgame
    • Gratuitous Gore on Highway 154
    • Saul Williams Brings Afro-Punk Tour to Velvet Jones
    • Where There’s a Dill, There’s a Way
    1. Travis Armstrong Is Outta There
    2. S.B. Bank & Trust's Rocky Year
    3. UC Campuses Dominate Rankings
    4. What buildings did architect Julia Morgan design in Santa Barbara?
    5. Rattlesnake and San Roque Side of Jesusita Trails to Re-Open Friday
    6. Sexile
    • CREATE AN ACCOUNT
    • LOG.IN
    • CONTENTS
    • CLASSIFIEDS
    • ARCHIVE
    • INFO | ADVERTISING | CONTACT US
    Google
     
    Independent.com Web
    Copyright ©2009 Santa Barbara Independent, Inc. Reproduction of material from any Independent.com pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. If you believe an Independent.com user or any material appearing on Independent.com is copyrighted material used without proper permission, please click here.
    This is our Privacy Policy.