For the second time, Caroline and I have completed an edition
of the Concurso Internacional de Piano de la Ciudad de Alicante Gonzalo Soriano
con el Conservatorio Jose Tomas. One
hundred and eleven candidates from over thirty countries came to compete in
four age categories and the final prizes were awarded last Saturday night.
Over four days, we directed candidates to play before the judges. We heard a particular Liszt Transcendental Study and Chopin Etudes many
times. We heard the First Sonata of Prokofiev once and the Sixth twice. Someone –
just one entrant – played a Shostakovich Prelude and Fugue, though those by
Bach appeared regularly, but were never repeated. We heard music by Rautavaara,
Carl Vine, Malipiero, Christian Helsing and a lot of Beethoven. The Rachmaninov
was wall-to-wall. The Medtner stood out. Nobody played anything English, but of
course there was a lot of Albeniz.
But the music aside - which it never should be - the
most impressive aspect of the week was its performers. More than a hundred
young people, some of them not so young, since the D category admitted
participants up to 32 years old, played their best (some I am sure would not
agree) in order to get a foot on at least one rung of a career ladder of
unknown height. It’s a horrible business, but it is undeniably a business.
People compete. People have to compete. Celebrity is currency and celebrity
exists in a market where talent might not count, but probably does, and
therefore recognition, and even work comes to no one unless that individual
competes. To win seems like a confirmation of talent. To lose feels like its
denial. But overall, luck place an important part, though luck is never quoted
in the results.
Luck? When celebrity comes as a result of a video presence on the internet then
luck might count. But when it comes to playing a piano, the only possible route to success goes via hours, days, months, and years of practice. And the most enduring
memory of organizing a piano competition is to realize that the vast majority
of these hundred plus competitors from six years old to thirty spend most of
their lives practicing, the major challenge in a pianist’s life being always
what the individual called "me" can achieve.
Shunta Marimoto, who won the senior category, seems to
be someone who communicates with the world via the keyboard of a piano. Almost
uncontrollably nervous before a performance, he seems to enter a different
universe the moment his fingers touch the keys. Then there is magic. Always, it
seems. A hundred or more of the people go through the same routine and the
result is different. This, possibly, may be talent, or the manifestation of it.
All the best arguments seem to be circular.
Ellisiv Tundberg, after a stunning performance of a
sonata movement by Carl Vine in the semis, played Rautavaara and Franck in the
final. Her playing of Cesar Franck’s Prelude, Choral and Fugue was the first
time I have ever understood the music. Often it is played almost as a
challenge, but in her hands its lyricism could shine through, but never as
sentiment. Quite superb.
During the week, it was in category B that the biggest
surprise came at the level, almost, of revelation. Luca Newman from the UK is a
diminutive teenager. When he plays the piano, his age or stature do not matter.
He has talent, application, dedication, and real artistry. What a privilege it
is to be close to these young performers.
It is, however, hard work. I am just a paper and
people pusher. I am just an organizer. But without this structure, the talent
show would not find a stage, and would therefore not be on show. Thanks to Istvan
Szekely for having thought it all up. Thanks also to Markus Schirmer, Tania
Kozlova, Elena Levit, Luca Torrigiani, Uros Tadic, Gaia Caporiccio and Denise
Lutgens for judging through the week. And nothing could happen without the
wonderful staff from Conservatorio Jose Tomas. Being involved is, however, an
exhausting privilege. I wish good luck to all who took part.
Detail at https://www.arsaltacultural.com/