BBC Music Magazine

The Berlin Recital

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Ligeti: Etudes pour piano – selection; Prokofiev: Piano Sonata No. 8; Rachmanino­v: Preludes – Op. 23 No. 5 in G minor; Op. 32 No. 10 in B minor; Etudes-tableaux – selection; Scriabin: Piano Sonata No. 10 Yuja Wang (piano) DG 483 6280 65:27 mins Listeners to this recording miss a swathe of what the Berlin audience caught in June 2018: more Rachmanino­v and four encores (released on an EP last year). The gain is in powerful connection­s forged instantly between works. Scriabin’s final sonata refines Rachmanino­v’s more elliptical aspect and foreshadow­s more direct Ligeti; Wang’s hypersensi­tive poetry sees through the veil but never rips it down. There’s even a hint of the mystic Russian’s chromatics in Prokofiev’s greatest sonata movement, the first of the Eighth.

All this highlights the poetry of a pianist we’ve more often seen in extrovert showcases like Prokofiev’s Third Piano Concerto. She knows how to give just enough space to a phrase while never losing sight of parallel lines (the middle of Rachmanino­v’s G minor Prelude, the dreaming Minuet at the heart of Prokofiev’s masterpiec­e). Personally I’d prefer a little less sustaining pedal in the close up sound, not that Wang ever uses it to cover up technical difficulti­es – she has none; it’s just that Prokofiev as pianist favoured a drier touch, and so do top performers Richter and Melnikov in his music. But that’s the deliberate choice of a supremely intelligen­t, deeply feeling artist of the first order. Now I want to hear Wang in all Rachmanino­v’s

Op. 39 Etudes-tableaux, all Ligeti’s Etudes and the Prokofiev sonatas immediatel­y preceding the Eighth. David Nice

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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