National Post (National Edition)

The remarkable rise of a young piano prodigy

- Ivan hewett The Daily Telegraph

Pianist Benjamin Grosvenor is just 25 and has reached a point in his career that most reach only in their 40s, Ivan Hewett writes. Grosvenor was named BBC Young Musician of the Year at age 11.

If you were asked who is the most exciting young pianist around right now, you’d probably opt for Yuja Wang or the flamboyant, show-stopping talent of Lang Lang. Or you might argue for Daniil Trifonov. But there’s a new contender in town who is not only equal to these three greats but possibly even better.

The career of 25-year-old Benjamin Grosvenor has been an almost vertical ascent in a few short years, an unbroken series of competitio­n wins and ecstatical­ly received debuts in concert halls all round the world. He won the keyboard section of the BBC Young Musician of the Year at the age of only 11, and seven years later performed at the First Night of the BBC Proms. In the same year, he became the youngest ever musician to be signed to Decca Classics and the first British pianist in 60 years. Now he’s constantly on the road, en route from one highprofil­e venue and orchestra to the next.

It’s the life most pianists only reach in their 40s and rarely by pianists from these shores. “A pianist to make you sigh with joy,” exclaimed the critic of The New York Times. “Perhaps the most remarkable young pianist of our time,” said Bryce Morrison, the veteran music critic.

What makes Grosvenor even more remarkable is his modest beginnings. His earliest concerts were in local church halls and a local fish and chip shop. When he was young, he didn’t attend a prodigious music academy but went to his local grammar school. Furthermor­e, his most formative musical experience­s came from within the family household where, as a child, he shared a room with his brother (he is one of six boys). “My mother is a music teacher, and she taught me at home,” says Grosvenor. “I suppose I was always quite discipline­d.”

That discipline is audible: Grosvenor has a perfectly honed technique. He’s unfazed by the most tumultuous passages in Ravel or Liszt. He has an exquisitel­y layered touch that recalls a bygone era. There’s an aristocrat­ic ease about him that seems all the more miraculous given that Grovesnor has none of the aristocrat­ic languor affected by some young pianists one could name.

He’s just won yet another award, the first ever Ackman to get down to it. Grosvenor thinks for a moment before saying, simply: “No, I never rebelled. I was always happy to be at the piano.”

Does he practise long hours or does he just soak things up like a sponge? “Well, I think there are faster learners out there. I do an average of six hours or so a day, not more unless I’m preparing for something really huge. The law of diminishin­g returns sets in if you practise more than that.”

It was his grandfathe­r who first introduced him to the world of concert piano. “We would listen to great pianists at places like the Festival Hall, and he introduced me to a recording of the Romanian there’s not enough bass!”

Was Grosvenor ever a pop music listener himself ? “Well, thanks to my brother I heard a lot. It was quite a noisy household, with me playing the piano on one side, and him with his pop music on the other, and I suppose some unhappy neighbours on either side.”

Does he have time for a private life? “Oh yes. I’m actually meeting my girlfriend and some friends tonight for sushi.” Is she a musician too? He won’t say. “I like company,” he continues, “but I’m not the life and soul of the party. When I was a student at the Royal Academy of Music I lived at home in Southend, which I now think was a mistake, as I didn’t make a very wide circle of friends. But you have to spend a lot of time on your own as a student of the piano... that’s why I love playing with other musicians more than giving recitals.”

Grosvenor is reluctant to come across as sounding too opinionate­d. In the past he has passionate­ly attacked cuts to music teaching in secondary schools. I ask him whether he’s a political animal. “Of course!” he says.

I remark that many musicians describe themselves as “apolitical”.

“Well that’s a way of avoiding the question in interviews like this,” he laughs. “I am Left-leaning, I suppose... If I do say something more, people will decide I’m one of those musicians who can be relied on for a quote about political matters, and I don’t want to be one of them.”

Grosvenor may be only 25, but he already has a shrewd idea of how the world works. That, combined with his amazing talent, will surely make his career a long as well as starry one.

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