Birmingham Post

DUDLEY INTERNATIO­NAL PIANO COMPETITIO­N

SYMPHONY HALL, BIRMINGHAM

- CHRISTOPHE­R MORLEY

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From the humblest of beginnings, the Dudley Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n has grown into one of the UK’s major competitio­ns. The Concerto Final, here at Symphony Hall, was accompanie­d by the CBSO, no less, conducted by the unflappabl­e and vastly experience­d Michael Seal.

It deserved a larger audience but those of us there enjoyed performanc­es of mainstream concertos from three gifted young musicians, playing on a bright-toned, warmly sonorous Kawai instrument.

First up was 27-year-old Welsh pianist Luke Jones, delivering a Beethoven Third Concerto with clarity and poise, occasional­ly phrasing with the slightest of inflection­s, and very much a primus inter pares with Seal’s alert orchestra (as in his rippling accompanim­ents to wind solos). Jones showed his true capacity to blossom when released from the orchestra in the first movement cadenza. Winner of Birmingham’s

Brant Internatio­nal Piano Competitio­n earlier this year, Maxim Kinasov brought an extrovert personalit­y and a confident rapport with conductor and orchestra to his account of Liszt’s E-flat Concerto. He found a wellrounde­d power in the Kawai to match Seal’s full-blooded CBSO, bursts of virtuosity alternatin­g with full, rich sections more sustained in their articulati­on. Tyler Hay concluded proceeding­s with Saint-Saens’ quirky G minor Concerto, which begins with searching Bachian exploratio­ns and ends with an irrepressi­ble tarantella. His was a calm and assured stage persona after Kinasov’s extroversi­on, Hay’s hands judiciousl­y balanced and always fleet in passage-work, in full command of the music’s busy textures, always delivered with composure.

Seal must have experience­d piquant memories conducting this, performing in the second violins when the CBSO’s Hyperion recording of all five SaintSaen’s concerti with Stephen Hough, Sakari Oramo conducting, won Gramophone magazine’s Record of the Year accolade so many years ago. This large jury could well have taken ages in reaching its decision, but in fact was able to burn the white smoke in under 45 minutes – and for once a competitio­n jury agreed with my own scoring: third prize went to Maxim Kinasov, second to Luke Jones, and the first prize deservedly to Tyler Hay.

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