Salty Wind by Jean Claude Roy graces the cover of this year's program. |
The seventeenth season of the Tuckamore Festival has already
begun to fulfill its tag-line mandate "Chamber music to Inspire" with
its first few days of programming.
Opening night featured the esteemed talent of André Laplante on piano,
who is often "hailed as one of the great romantic virtuosos" as
stated in the program notes. Now,
whether you are up on your music history and are conversant in your terminology
or romantic means something else to you, Laplante made it all come true. He delivered.
The audience warmly responded to his opening interpretation
of Haydn's Sonata in E Flat Major and generously showered Laplante with
standing ovations even before the intermission. The emotional connection he obviously shares with the music
is palpable and as I overheard one audience member comment, "that Laplante
is some vigorous".
Next on the program was the Chopin Sonata No. 2 in B Flat
Minor with its signature somber funeral march–not what the audience expected as
the piece that would take us into an intermission. But Laplante played it with fresh intentions and surprising
clarity that knocked any clichés out of a composition that has morphed its way
into our cultural fabric in everything ranging from soundtracks for cartoons to
advertising. Laplante's version
gave me shivers, especially the Finale: Presto. Sotto voce e legato.
Speaking of "sotto voce" there were a lot of
murmurs during intermission about André Laplante's subvocalizing while
playing. Glenn Gould's name was
frequently mentioned. This is when
I resolved to attend the next day's After the Music: Concert Chat and Coffee at
the Rocket Bakery to learn more about the audience response.
Seven outspoken women gathered around a round table at The
Rocket Café the next day and dived into a lively discussion about André
Laplante's performance. Some had
attended his masterclass earlier in the morning; we varied in background from
those with years of keyboard experience and careers in music to aficionados (like
myself) without formal training.
It was a good cross section and provided lots of friendly debate. I'd say that whether you believed that
sub vocalizing is a distraction or an access point into the internal world of
the performer (the music instead their head) you would have learned
something. There was intense
conversation about pedaling, graceful hand flourishes, sustained notes, clipped
notes and the variables that a concert pianist has to deal with on tour. My favourite observation was from one of
our participants who exclaimed, "don't you think there should be something
called a 'man-piano'?"
Everyone was in agreement that André Laplante had played the concluding
two Liszt compositions in the performance with a rare integrity, a seamless
relationship between man, piano and music.
Gloria Hickey
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