Los Angeles Times

Pianist plays a force of nature

Igor Levit’s public recital in Costa Mesa was like ‘a keyboard bomb cyclone.’

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

The 30-year-old Russianbor­n, Berlin-based pianist Igor Levit on Wednesday received the 2018 Gilmore Artist Award. Like the MacArthur “genius” awards, the $300,000 prize (given every four years) recognizes creativity, in this case, in keyboard artists.

That evening in New York, Levit played a short celebrator­y program on the radio station WQXR (archived on its website). He then caught one of the last flights out of the city before the bomb cyclone hit.

By Saturday night, Levit was at the Renée and Henry Segerstrom Concert Hall in Costa Mesa, where he gave his first full public recital since the Gilmore announceme­nt. It was stupendous.

From the first note, he so radically changed the atmospheri­c pressure in the hall, it was as if he had packed a keyboard bomb cyclone in his suitcase.

A solo piano can get lost in this big theater and Levit is a small man. He hunched over the keyboard, beginning with a work for the left hand alone. From where I

sat, in the boxes upstairs, he felt far away until he hit the first note and the sheer depth and resonant sovereignt­y of his tone engulfed a monumental space.

Three years ago, he made his Southern California debut in what at the time seemed like an out-of-theway recital at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. It was modestly attended.

It was also in every way remarkable — in his curious but thoughtful programmin­g, in his ever surprising interpreta­tions of Beethoven, Bach, Prokofiev and a strange piano fantasy on Benjamin Britten’s opera “Peter Grimes.”

Since then, Levit has shown a penchant for making news at the piano and away from it. His three-CD set of variations by Bach (“Goldberg”), Beethoven (“Diabelli”) and Frederic Rzewski (“The People United Will Never be Defeated!”) won award after award and proved a bestseller.

When he played the “Goldberg” Variations in New York, audience members were required to leave their cellphones behind and spend a half-hour in meditative silence with noise-canceling headphones before he began. When not on the ivories, his fingers tweet obsessivel­y against Trump, a duty he feels is almost as sacred as practicing.

If there were still any doubt that Levit has the making of a great pianist, Saturday’s recital put that to utter rest. The program was somber; he has described it in an interview as a reaction to the death of a close friend. The pieces were mostly transcript­ions by one composer of another, which is a special kind of remembranc­e.

The first was Brahms’ arrangemen­t for the left hand alone of Bach’s Chaconne from the Violin Partita No. 2 in D Minor. Unlike typical left-hand pieces intended to fool the listener into thinking both hands are at play, Brahms didn’t pretend a hand can do any more than expected.

Much of the work remains on the lower half of the keyboard. The harmonies are thickened, and the coloration­s are muted. The illusion Levit created was that of bowing, so connected was one note to the next.

In the meantime, his right hand found its own activities, sometimes holding onto the bench, other times hovering over the keys stopping just short of touching down. It was a phantom limb, and the awareness of its presence yet absence of its sound (along with a mind of its own) made the performanc­e all the more moving.

Five preludes and fugues, from the 24 Shostakovi­ch wrote, are original music, but Bach here remains in the background as a composer phantom. Neither Shostakovi­ch’s counterpoi­nt nor ideas have the inspired character of Bach’s keyboard preludes and fugues, but they come from a deep, dark, sonorous place that Levit revealed as only made possible by Bach’s inspiratio­n.

Schumann’s so-called Ghost Variations, his last work for piano, is also based on an original theme, only in this heartbreak­ing case, the composer, his mind coming unglued, didn’t remember he had written it. He thought it came from an angel. He then thought he was possessed by devils.

This ethereal set of variations is seldom played perhaps because it is so little of this world. Levit’s levitating lyricism took care of that.

For the recital’s second half, Liszt looked at Wagner and Busoni at Liszt. In the former, Levit treated the “The Solemn March to the Holy Grail from ‘Parsifal’” transcript­ion as though Liszt wrote it for a piano made of sonorous bells.

Busoni’s arrangemen­t of Liszt’s half-hour monumental organ piece, Fantasy and Fugue on “Ad Nos, ad Salutarem Undam,” brought in a third composer, Meyerbeer, from whose opera “La Prophete” this Anabaptist chorale was derived.

Levit tore into the extravagan­t piano version as though he had somehow grown an extra limb. He took the opening section so fast that too much detail was lost, but that only made Liszt’s overheated imaginatio­n come across as all the more fantastic. The slow central section brought back the angels and let them stay around for a heavenly long while. The fugue took all the oxygen out of the room.

At the Wallis three years ago, Levit promised that he represente­d the future of pianism. Saturday at Segerstrom, the future arrived.

 ?? Robbie Lawrence ?? PIANIST IGOR LEVIT was honored last week with the 2018 Gilmore Artist Award for his musical creativity.
Robbie Lawrence PIANIST IGOR LEVIT was honored last week with the 2018 Gilmore Artist Award for his musical creativity.

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