Tuesday 11 March 2014

Fort Town Concert Association February 28th Concert Review by Guest Blogger


On Friday, February 28th the young Canadian pianist Tina Chong  presented the 3rd concert in Prescott's Fort Town Concert Association's Series.  Born in Banff, Ms. Chong grew up in Calgary where she gave her first performance with orchestra at the age of nine.  As a young emerging artist, she has already won many  competitions in Brazil and the United States, including the prize as  Best Canadian Artist at the 2011 Montreal International Music Competition.  She has performed in concerts in Canada, the United States and Brazil, and is  currently touring Ontario and Quebec as a Jeunesses Musicales Canada artist.  A graduate of Oberlin College, she is presently studying on scholarship for her music doctorate at Indiana University. 

 

Her concert Friday night was the highlight of the Fort Town Concert Association's Series.  Her secure and fluent technique enabled her to convey the contrasts of her varied and challenging program, with the theme of  "Keyed Fantasies".  She introduced each piece with an interesting literary description relating to the composer and the music to follow.  The relatively unstructured form of the "fantasy"  gives the freedom to project events and emotions through the  music, as was evident in each selection on the program.

 

Opening the program was a  Prelude from a Harpsichord Suite by Handel, composed about 1733.  This was an age of improvisation, and the scoring for this Prelude is a series of chords, a guide or outline on which the performer must build the music.  Creatively improvised by Ms. Chong, it was suggestive of the "fantasies" to follow.  This led into the Beethoven Sonata Op. 27 No. 1, one of two "in the manner of a fantasy", the other being the more familiar "Moonlight Sonata".  Beethoven himself titled it as a "fantasia", inverting the usual order of  the movements, which flow into each other without pause.  The demands of contrast and tempo showed not only Ms. Chong's secure technique, but a gentle sensitivity for the lyrical melody and syncopated rhythms.

 

 A contrast, and a substitute in the program, was  the dreamy, lovely Barcarolle by Chopin.  Often described as a love duet, the languorous, surging rhythm describes a gondola gliding through the water. The middle section is faster and more agitated, but the piece ends serenely with the rocking rhythm of the first section.  This descriptive music was beautifully played by Ms. Chong. 

 

The last piece before intermission was the "Scottish Fantasy" by Mendelssohn.  A piece beloved by pianists, filled with melody, each movement faster than the preceding one it builds to an exciting ending.  It is  a high energy piece filled with challenges for the pianist.  It was brilliantly played to an exciting finish.

 

The second part of the concert opened with Schumann's suite of twelve short pieces, "Papillons".  Inspired by a Jean Paul quotation" let all that is marvellous fly.....as a butterfly at twilight",  the pieces are vignettes of events at a masked ball, from a wedding waltz to the end of the festivities at midnight. Ms. Chong's engaging performance of each piece was full of life and playful contrast.  

 

The most demanding work was the 6th Sonata by Sergei Prokofiev.  This was the first of three  "War Sonatas" composed at the outbreak of W.W.II.   Frustrated with the insipid restrictions on his  work, Prokofiev found  release  in this description of the ravages of war.  A highly charged dramatic work, it is extremely difficult technically and emotionally for the performer, and challenging for the listener.  Sharp dissonances and frequent key changes increase the sense of despair and suffering, relieved only by a slower waltz--like section. It finishes with a thunderous climax bringing together all the themes from previous sections.  Ms. Chong gave an absolutely stunning performance of this titanic piece, bringing the audience to a standing ovation.

 

The evening was opened by "Jazz Latte", a local trio of musicians with Mary Moore, lead vocalist and composer of two of the numbers played. They have entertained at many charity events in this area and their "opening" was appreciated and enjoyed.

 

The performances this evening were the first to use the magnificent new stage created in St. Andrew's Church.  A credit to the whole community, this project is the result of  a  co-operative effort by St. Andrew's Church, the St. Lawrence Shakespeare Festival and the Fort Town Concert Association,  assisted by a Trillium Grant from the Province of Ontario and the generosity of many individual supporters.  A formal inauguration will take place in May.

 

This Series is supported by the Ontario Arts Council; Tina Chong's concert was sponsored by Judith Caldwell.  The next concert will be a performance of "La Boheme" on Saturday, March 29 at 7.30 P.M., on the new stage.  Tickets are still available at www.ftca.ca

 

 

 

Submitted by;

Lois Davidson

1662 County Rd. 2 West

Prescott  K0E 1T0

613-918-0721

lcat2@cogeco.ca

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