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During
a recital some years ago, a pianist introduced a Chopin Impromptu by
describing its improvisatory essence, likening it to a snapshot of perhaps
transient musical ideas, a significant but mere facet of genius. After the
concert, a regular at our private gatherings took issue with the pianist.
“How could we, the listeners, possibly know that such a piece was largely
improvisatory unless you told us? Isn’t it all just written down, composed
music?” The pianist politely declined to engage, since the customer is
always right. “Just listen!” ought to have been her response. |
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During a recital some years ago, a pianist introduced a Chopin
Impromptu by describing its improvisatory essence, likening it to a
snapshot of perhaps transient musical ideas, a significant but mere
facet of genius. After the concert, a regular at our private
gatherings took issue with the pianist. “How could we, the
listeners, possibly know that such a piece was largely improvisatory
unless you told us? Isn’t it all just written down, composed music?”
The pianist politely declined to engage, since the customer is
always right. “Just listen!” ought to have been her response.
Contrary to much popular belief, improvisation has played a large
part in the development of so-called “classical” music. Not only
Chopin was noted for a brilliance of passing invention. Beethoven
improvised. Listen to the Sonata Opus 111 – especially under the
fingers of Rudolf Buchbinder – with an expectation of jazz. There’s
a whole sequence somewhere between boogie-woogie and ragtime – from
a hundred years before anyone else thought of either! Bach
improvised. After all, there’s a whole raft of his compositions
called “inventions”. An improvisatory quality introduces a sense of
genuine surprise into the musical flow of a piece, a tangent to the
argument that can conjure the unexpected.
Many pianists also include improvisatory elements in performance.
It’s nothing more than an element of what we generally refer to as
interpretation. A hint of rubato for some might be a lack of
accuracy, whereas for others it’s interpretive genius. Similarly,
new improvisatory approaches to the Baroque ground bass are perhaps
closer to how it would have been played originally than the
mechanically ground-out pluck of more recent past decades.
There are times, of course, when an improvisatory approach, however
minimal, would be inappropriate. I cannot imagine Webern played in
any other way than indicated in his micro-managed scoring. And for
all its jazz-like elements, minimalism works because of its
obsession with the detail of infinitesimal change, detail that would
be lost if either over-worked or over-stated.
Now despite these close bonds between so-called “classical” music
and improvisation, I usually avoid anything that purports to link
the approaches. The experience of “classical” celebrities “crossing
over” generally generates muzak. When popular artists join
“classical” friends, the artistic, if not financial, result is
usually embarrassment for both. Carla Bley, Frank Zappa and Keith
Jarrett might exemplify a counter-argument. But then where would you
site such talents in the first place? Menuhin and Grappelli
collaborated successfully, despite Menuhin describing the experience
as vamping while an improvisatory genius played for ever without
once repeating himself. No doubt the awe would have flowed in the
opposite direction if the material had been Elgar.
So it was with some trepidation that I approached Elena Lasco’s
recital in May 2009 in L’Alfas del Pi. Forming part of the unique
Spain-Norway Festival hosted by this little Norwegian town on
Spain’s Costa Blanca, Elena Lasco’s concert advertised a classical
and jazz programme, but thankfully no cross-over, which would only
have made me over-cross.
In the first half, Elena Lasco played a set of Schumann Variations,
Grieg’s Norwegian Dances and Cordoba and Seguidillas by Albeniz.
Make no mistake, however. Elena Lasco is no part-time classical
pianist. She studied for ten years in Moscow’s Tchaikowsky Academy
and was already something of a prodigy as well. Her pianistic and
interpretive skills are from the top drawer. When one adds to that
five years of master classes in the famous Jazz Academy of Moscow’s
Gnesin Academy the mix is not just virtuosic and persuasive – it’s
totally convincing. The rhythmic fluidity matched with complete
control that she brings to pieces like the deceptively demanding
Norwegian Dances of Edvard Grieg render them nothing less than a
revelation. Albeniz always does benefit from rhythmic fluidity, in
my opinion. It adds a commentary to the angularity and occasional
abruptness of his style. And even in the Schumann the suggestion of
an improvisatory edge merely added to both the drama and virtuosity.
The second half of Elena Lasco’s Alfas recital was devoted to jazz
standards and her own compositions. Appropriately we heard a homage
to Errol Garner alongside some standards from the golden years of
jazz.
Elena Lasco’s improvisations are impressively inventive and always
swing. We are transported to the world of Garner or Peterson, not
Cecil Taylor or even McCoy Tyner. It’s a jazz Romanticism, infused
with the personal, the memorable and occasionally the spectacular,
but only for its melodic or rhythmic impact, never merely to
impress. It’s a style that does not aim to confuse or obfuscate.
This is musical story-telling at its most communicative.
On 15 October 2009, Elena Lasco will make her London debut in the
Conway Hall. She will present a jazz programme and entry to the
concert will be free. Again she will feature jazz standards
alongside her own compositions. Londoners will thus have the chance
to experience what the privileged full house at the Spain-Norway
Festival in L’Alfas del Pi lapped up in May, or indeed what Elena
Lasco’s 200 million Russian television audience could not get enough
of. Elena Lasco’s is a unique mix of talent and style.
Philip Spires
Contact
Elena Lasco here
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