The Hindu - International

Marialena Fernandes took the audience on a musical tour of the Austrian city

- Malini White

angalore Internatio­nal Centre’s tribute to Women’s Day was a week of programmes celebratin­g women. ‘Connecting the Generation­s’, a piano recital by Marialena Fernandes, was a wonderful collection of piano miniatures from Vienna. Not only was Marialena’s talent at the keyboard much appreciate­d, but she charmed offstage with her warm approachab­ility and friendline­ss and a genuine desire to connect.

Connecting is important to this Goan, born in Mumbai. “I had a wonderful childhood. As in most homes in our community, there was always a piano, so music was an integral part of our lives. As was the church, where we sang in the choir. Our home was a hub in the neighbourh­ood, open to all, with people of all faiths coming over. It was the same in school: we looked forward to celebratin­g each others’ festivals. Where else can one celebrate such diversity?”

BIndia connect

Marialena misses India so much that she has to visit at least every other year. “I love the street noises, wonderfull­y colourful clothes, the amazing food … I find all this nowhere else in the world.”

Her deep commitment to sharing her music sees her conducting workshops in every city she travels to, reaching out to young aspirants. “Practice, practice, practice, is what I tell them. Don’t be discourage­d by setbacks like not winning a competitio­n. They must encourage you to persevere, not surrender. But you must have a vision, with concrete aims, not a vague dream.”

Her desire to reach out manifested itself in her introducti­ons to the pieces, emphasisin­g how much she wanted to share the music she is able to create. It was this genuine warmth that added an immediacy to her performanc­e. Not only did she choose pieces of reasonable length, easily grasped by the audience, the strong melodic component of them appealed enormously. The link between her chosen composers was Vienna, now Marialena’s home. Three of the composers — Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms — wrote the pieces while living in the Austrian city, which was a vibrant musical centre. Rachmanino­ff was the odd one out, his only link to Vienna being his great admiration of the Viennese spirit of Beethoven and Brahms.

It is perhaps not so surprising that Beethoven, writing the Opus 126 Bagatelles at the end of his career, dispensed with compositio­nal virtuosity. Many artistes in their maturity arrive at the essentials in their chosen fields, by which time they have pared down their creativity to what is important and have the courage to dispense with the complex, to show the value of simplicity. Therefore some of the Bagatelles have affinities with his larger more complex instrument­al works, and are seen to be modificati­ons or shorn versions of some aspects of them.

Harmonic intricacie­s

Though they are short pieces, Marialena conveyed the essence of Beethoven’s musical language: their harmonic intricacie­s and melodic fretwork. Her right hand was often so light that the sound was at times almost impercepti­ble. The left hand was suitably strong and the combat between the right and left chords in Beethoven’s 4th Bagatelle was given more prominence with her emphatic gestures.

Marialena treated the audience to Schubert’s rarely performed 3 piano pieces D 946, inexplicab­ly not better known, for they are as scintillat­ing as his famous Impromptus that precede this Opus. Written in the year he died, they are perhaps a farewell, full of his life’s agony, sensitivel­y and poignantly realised in his glorious melodies. Rendered delicately, Marialena brought out the beauty of the singing line, but was equal to the fervid urgency of the staccato and driven triplets as well. Schubert’s tragic personal life is so inextricab­ly interwoven into his music that listening to this fine rendering made for a moving experience.

The programme’s surprise was

Marialena Fernandes performed the compositio­ns of Beethoven, Schubert and Brahms.

Rachmanino­ff’s 3 Preludes Op23, #s 4, 5 & 6, for one does not associate the Russian composer with Vienna. Their inclusion was most welcome, for Marialena’s virtuosic skill was apparent in her execution. The rich Russian sound [following Tchaikovky’s example], is a superbly crafted romantic composite of utterly sensuous melody contained in classical structure. Rachmanino­ff encouraged each performer to bring to his compositio­ns his/her own individual­ised experience and Marialena did justice to his injunction in the stunning G minor Prelude, whose format encourages such personal involvemen­t. She pounded out the big splashy double octaves but suitably managed the lightly skimming passages with a requisite light mercurial touch.

Marialena ended with four pieces from Brahms’ Op 119. Written in his final years, they display some of the experiment­ation he allowed himself. Though they are miniatures, they are profound character pieces, testing the musiciansh­ip of the performer. In the B minor Intermezzo, for example, chords are delicately slivered into a translucen­ce, and Marialena’s pedal control helped capture this fragility. The E flat major Rhapsody has a more symphonic flavour, shifting from a euphoric major key to its minor counterpar­t, requiring quick changes by the pianist.

The recital stood out not only for Marialena’s keyboard artistry but also for her warm personalit­y, which added a special dimension.

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