Business World

The pianist’s body

Cecile Licad on Nedy Tantoco, practice, and reaching her peak

- Cecil Licad, S2/4

WHEN we watch a classical music performanc­e, what we see is a union between human and instrument. Few people do that better than piano prodigy Cecile Licad, who passed audition at the Curtis Institute of Music at 12 and had been one of the youngest recipients of the Leventritt Gold Medal in 1981. Now in her 60s, Ms. Licad talked to BusinessWo­rld about how the pianist’s body performs, in light of her March 19 concert, Cecile Licad at the Met: A Women’s Month Concert, held at The Metropolit­an Theater in Manila.

Asked what a piano demands from its player, she said, “From my feet, to my hands, to my head, to my heart.”

But first, the concert: conducted by Gregorz Nowak, Ms. Licad performed with the Philippine Philharmon­ic Orchestra, who opened the concert with Brahms’

Symphony No. 2, Op. 73 in D major. The program said, “The D-Major Symphony seems to reflect the composer’s relaxed state of mind during the happy summer of 1877.” After an intermissi­on, Ms. Licad appeared on stage, playing, in concert with the orchestra,

Piano Concerto No. 1, Op. 23 in B-flat minor on a Fazioli. After that, Ms. Licad appeared on stage for three encores: she dedicated a piece to late Rustan’s matriarch Zenaida “Nedy” Tantoco (namely, Schumann’s Widmung), a piece by her great-uncle, composer Francisco Buencamino, and Chopin’s Minute Waltz.

During a group interview at Ms. Tantoco’s home in Forbes Park two days after the concert, Ms. Licad discussed why those pieces were chosen. She played the piece by her great-uncle because it had been used in movies shown at the Metropolit­an Theater during its heyday; she picked the Minute Waltz because the conductor that evening was Polish. As for the dedication to Ms. Tantoco, she said, “In any room, I always have the most beautiful flowers, and it’s always from Tita Nedy.” In fact, asked about the floral-appliqued black dress she wore and where she got it, she said, “Rustan’s! Rustan’s is the best. What can I say?”

As for the Tchaikovsk­y piece she selected to play, she said, “I feel like I’m ready to tackle it again. I feel like — sometimes you just feel like, ‘I want to eat this.’ I want to build some kind of muscle again.”

THE PIANO AND HER BODY

“It requires a lot. It requires physical strength. It requires sharp reflexes, and it requires a soul of a... a hot soul!,” she said with laughter, describing what that particular Tchaikovsk­y piece requires of her.

She recalled teaching a masterclas­s once, and hearing a student perform, she said, “Can you put, like a mainit na ano (something hot) in your ass?” Then she laughed. “I’m so sorry, but that’s really the way I talk. People don’t know what’s in my head when I’m playing. They think it’s like something so intellectu­al, whatever. But sometimes I have to make kurot (pinch) myself; since my mother’s not there. I would do anything — I would eat a hot pepper if I’m nervous. And then I would be like, ‘Ay, ang anghang (that’s hot)!’ Then I’d be like, ‘Yes!’

“You have to feel a burn in your butt!”

Ms. Licad talked about how her body works with a piano. “I talk to it. It’s like a pet. ‘You better deliver,’” she said. “I don’t care about any piano that I will play, but it has to work. It’s a machine. It’s usually the player who will make it alive. But it helps to have a piano technician.”

Then she talks about practicing and rehearsals, for which her fingers and feet come to play. “I have to talk to my fingers,” she said. “I would change my fingering to what I feel at that moment.

That’s why I practice. So that all my fingers are independen­t.”

“When I’m playing — you’re like an actor. I have to feel the teleserye (TV soap opera). I call it like a novel, inside, so that I can convey it to the public. If I don’t feel anything — but not only feel — it goes to the fingers. It’s like channeling, really.”

And her feet! “People don’t know that, but the pedaling of the piano is the most important.”

MAINTAININ­G HER BODY

As with any person who uses their body to work, it is toned and perfected by practice.

Ms. Licad talks about how she practices, and how she always begins from scratch. Here, she isn’t the child prodigy traveling the world as a teen, or given awards by presidents: she has a Presidenti­al Medal of Merit from the late President Corazon Aquino, a Pamana sa Pilipino Award from Mrs. Aquino’s son, President Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino, and former First Lady Imelda Marcos held the phone for her so the pianist Van Cliburn could hear her play when she had turned 12 (a story she recounted to Mrs. Marcos’ son, now-President Ferdinand Marcos, Jr.). When practicing, she is always a student.

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