Some of you may have read my reports from the two previous Cleveland Competitions. I volunteer for a chamber/recital presenter, Del Valle Fine Arts, as piano guru among other things. We have an arrangement with the competition to hire the winner, hence we can get free tickets, and so I journeyed 2000 miles back to my Old Home Town the week of August 3 to take in the Semi-Finals (solo recitals) and Finals (concertos with the Clev eland Orchestra, Jahja Ling conducting). A couple of new wrinkles this time. The recitals at the Cleveland Playhouse now have a giant screen (15 feet wide or so) above the stage. Five robot cameras show various wide and close shots of the players, including a SkyCam (or BlimpCam, if you like) high above the keyboard. It was sometimes distracting, but overall the big screen added to the experience, though on the last day they had some technical problems. The giant screen feed also went to a video webcast, first time this year (Cleveland was no doubt spurred by the superb job the Cliburn did with their webcast). However, the few chances I had to catch the prelims via a good high-speed hookup were problematical -- one day fine, two other days prone to freeze-up. Needs work. Those not wedded to visuals could catch the audio via WCLV broadcast or webcast as usual 32 pianists were in Cleveland for the competition. A couple more invitees were no-shows, including Evgeny Bozhanov, the most controversial of the Cliburn finalists. I was disappointed that I didn't get another chance to catch his act. After two prelim recitals the field was cut down to eight Semifinalists; after their hour-long semifinal recitals, the field would be halved to four Finalists, who would play with the orchestra at Severance Hall. Peter Frankl chaired the international jury. The Semis Dmitri Levkovitch, Ukraine/Canada - A local favorite, CIM graduate, made the semis last time, but not the finals. If nothing else, he LOOKS like a concert pianist: tall, slender, with a leonine mane of blonde hair. Dye the hair black and augment his nose and any casting director would drool at the prospect of signing him for a Liszt biopic. His playing was relaxed and controlled, but I thought his Debussy Pour le Piano a bit hard, and his Rach2 sonata somewhat muddy in spots. He opened with a Haydn sonata. Evgeny Brakhman, Russia - Also played the Rachmaninoff sonata, and had this been a old-fashioned Harlem cutting contest, Canada would have been left bleeding on the floor. Very exciting and clean performance. He made a programming mistake, however, with the six Etudes-Tableau he also played. Apart from Too Much Rachmaninoff (which became the unofficial slogan of the whole competition, by the way), one of them, from Op. 39, was so very like the Sonata it sounded like a sketch for the big piece. Two pieces by Messiaen and two Debussy etudes plus L'Isle Joyeuse rounded out his program. Brakhman is very much a high-powered Russian competition thoroughbred, and I'd pass him through to the finals just to hear his Rach3. Pallavi Mahidhara, Indian/American - Maybe she was doomed from the start; her bio portrait unfortunately made her look like Amy Winehouse. Even so, I was baffled that she made it this far. All her playing, while precise, was hard, flat, foursquare and uninflected. Bach's French Suite is a suite of dances after all; Mahidhara would have you believe they were all clog dances! Same problems with her Pour le Piano and Liszt B Minor Sonata. Martina Filjak, Croatia - An attractive raven-haired young woman, looks rather like the actress Amy Brenneman. She went for the Long Bomb by programming Beethoven's Hammerklavier Sonata, and boy did she nail it! A powerful and emotional performance (that frankly left Tsuji's performance at the Cliburn in the dust). Another unusual choice with Scriabin's Op. 9#2 Nocturne for the Left Hand, beautifully played. Her Ravel Une Barque sur L'Ocean was the first "French Impressionist" piece (a requirement in the Semis) that actually sounded impressionist. Best so far, by far. Yunquing Zhou, China - I was eager to hear more from Zhou, after having heard him play several of the delightful Nicolai Kapustin etudes in the prelims. That a 20-year-old Chinese pianist could play these difficult jazz-inflected pieces not only well, but with perfect style and swing struck me as a minor miracle. His selection of Debussy preludes was fine. Oddly he was the only one to choose these this year; they dominated the French selection in past competitions. His Liszt B Minor Sonata was good for a while, especially in the lyrical section, but then too much caffeine or the fast&loud syndrome took over and the piece went off the rails. This was followed by even more pounding and flash in the Bartok Sonata. Zhou is a freakishly adept key-presser, but musically, who can tell Is this blow-the-doors-off approach an expression of his musical self or of a Win the Contest strategy - I smell Lang Lang Syndrome here. A big disappointment. Kuok-Wai Lio, China - His main piece was the Schubert Impromptus - the only Schubert heard this week. Franz's placid ripplings were a huge relief after Zhou's Liszt-Bartok bombings. His L'Isle Joyeuse was fine, less percussive than the others. Finishing with the Kreisler/Rachmaninoff Liebesleid/Lebesfreud pair he missed an opportunity. He could have charmed the pants off the audience done right, but he chose to emphasize Rach flash over gemutlichkeit. More schmaltz was needed, though on top of Schubert, maybe it would have been too much. Still a good effort, and Lio was rewarded by the audience with a recall, where Zhou didn't get one. William Youn, Korea - Not far into his opening Faure Nocturne, it was obvious that we had a contender here. Refined, controlled playing, superb touch & tone. The nicely balanced program continued with Davisbundlertanze and Liszt's Benediction de Dieu Dans la Solitude. He finished with the Liszt Rigoletto Paraphrase, just the right proportion of bravura. It was a treat to be offered music rather than assaulted with flash & fire. Soo-Yeon Ham, Korea -This young woman provided nicely proportioned, clean playing throughout. But nothing her programa's overperformed competition staples -- Chopin Sonata 2, Ravel Gaspard -- really caught my attention. Liszt's Venezia e Napoli as a closer was nicely done, but the piece did go on a bit (Liszt's fault). Overall, a solid performance, but lacking spark. So three must-advance choices by my ear: Brakhman, Filjak & Youn. The fourth choice was a toss-up: Ham OK, Lio OK, Levkovitch OK, take your pick. I had a lurking fear that Zhou might get picked. It turned out the judges were in tune with me (for the third time in a row, I picked three of four). Finalists: Brakhman, Filjak, Youn and Levkovich. One common denominator: all four are at the top end of the age range - Filjak & Levkovitch - 30, Brakhman - 28, Youn - 26. Apparently experience and maturity count for something. The Finals So here we are at Severance for the concertos. The Too Much Rachmaninoff syndrome was certainly in play this weekend. If the selection of the final four had been different we could have had an all-Rach weekend -- 3 Rach2s and 2 Rach3s were on tap from the eight. As it was we got Rach2 and Rach3 on Friday, and Rach2 again and -- surprise -- Brahms 1 on Saturday. Levkovitch, Rach 2 - A safe and sane version. Controlled, sensible tempos, cleanly played. Some synch problems with Ling, but nothing major. Levkovitch received an exuberant ovation, with the balcony packed with his CIM classmates. Brakhman, Rach 3 - Hearing 2 & 3 back-to-back for the first time live, I was struck by how different these two concertos are in how they utilize the pianist, with quite a contrast in (seeming) virtuosic requirements and (apparent) audience appeal. The soloist in 3 is much more exposed, with big cadenzas and solo passages; in 2 he/she is much more with the orchestra, mainly stepping into the spotlight for the big tunes. It seems like the pianist in 3 plays maybe three times as many notes. Anyway, Brakhman delivered an extremely virtuosic performance, but marred by banging, especially in the first cadenza, and rushed tempos, especially in the third movement, Ling scrambling to keep up. But his runs were clean and dazzling throughout. Predictably, the audience went nuts. Me, lots of reservations, but not that he'd get the prize if the audience voted for it. Filjak, Rach 2 - A similar, no-eccentricities reading like Levkovitch's, but a bit more sharply pointed. She cut through the orchestral textures more assertively than Levkovitch, and swooned the big tunes nicely. She wore a spectacular red gown, that Bob Conrad of WCLV later dubbed winner of the "Zowie Award". Youn, Brahms 1 - What a relief to hear something other than Rachmaninoff! A very clean and rhythmically solid reading, but perhaps a bit dry. The orchestra seemed energized by having something to play other than Rach. Coordination with Ling was tight throughout. Strictly as a concerto performance, never mind the competition aspect, this was for me the musical highlight of the weekend. My ranking after the last performance: Youn & Filjak virtual tie at the top, Brakhman, Levkovitch. Not what I expected from the judges, but what my vote would have been (though recall, I heard very little of the prelims, which counted 1/3 of the score). I had no idea how the judges would vote. Each of the four played exceptionally well. Levkovitch's playing was overall the most uniform, but conversely, had little dazzlement. Filjak & Youn both gave exceptional semi recitals. Brakhman's repertoire & playing was very much in the tradition of Russian contest winners. The Results Filjak - 1st, Levkovitch - 2nd, Youn - 3rd, Brakhman - 4th. Sunday afternoon they handed out the prizes and each of the finalists gave a short recital. In addition to copping the $50,000 first prize, Filjak also took home another $5500, winning the Junior Jury Prize, the Beethoven Prize (a lock there, after her Hammerklavier performance), and the Contemporary prize (for a Berio piece she played in the prelims). Nice payday! Brakhman played two Etudes Tableau, Youn played the Liszt Benediction, Levkovitch Scarlatti, a Rach Prelude (the last gasp of the Too Much Rach weekend), and the Chopin 2nd Scherzo. Filjak reprised the Scriabin left hand etude, and finished with three pieces from Bartok's Out of Doors. It is clear that our winner has unconventional and audience-challenging notions about repertoire: Berio, Bartok, Scriabin, the Hammerklavier. None of her solo pieces were competition staples. I'm really looking forward to hearing what she'll bring to Del Valle Fine Arts in the 2010-11 season. Art Scott Livermore, Cal. *********************************************** The CLASSICAL mailing list is powered by L-Soft's renowned LISTSERV(R) list management software together with L-Soft's HDMail High Deliverability Mailer for reliable, lightning fast mail delivery. For more information, go to: http://www.lsoft.com/LISTSERV-powered.html