Leif Ove Andsnes, Wigmore Hall review - colour and courage, from Hardanger to Majorca

★★★★ LEIF OVE ANDSNES, WIGMORE HALL Colour and courage, from Hardanger to Majorca

Bold and bracing pianism in favourite Chopin and a buried Norwegian treasure

Forthright and upright, powerful and lucid, the frank and bold pianism of Leif Ove Andsnes took his Wigmore Hall audience from Norway to Poland (or rather, Paris and Majorca) with a final stop in France. A recital that began with two large-scale Norwegian sonatas – one a remarkable discovery – culminated in the ostensibly remote sound-world of Chopin’s 24 Preludes, part-written on the Balearic island.

Boris Giltburg, Wigmore Hall review - epic heaven and hell

★★★★★ BORIS GILTBURG, WIGMORE HALL Chameleonic Scriabin, Schumann and Chopin

Scriabin, Schumann and Chopin at their most chameleonic

With rapid, sleight-of-hand flicks between calm assurance and demonic agitation, Boris Giltburg turned in a coherent and epic recital that won’t be surpassed in 2024. Most pianists would quake simply at the thought of performing the four Chopin Scherzos in sequence; Giltburg set them up with phenomenal insights into Scriabin and Schumann.

Prom 42: Cho, Philharmonia, Rouvali review - inflation offset by sweet oases

PROM 42: CHO, PHILHARMONIA, ROUVALI Chopin en rose, Elgar and Richard Strauss in Italy

Chopin en rose, Elgar and Richard Strauss in Italy

Chopin’s piano concertos and Strauss “symphonic fantasia” Aus Italien are young men’s music, bursting with inspired ideas, but baggy at times, hard to steer. Elgar’s In the South is up there with the mature Strauss tone poems – even if it couldn’t have taken the shape it did without them – but here the steering itself was the problem: missing the exuberance, the Philharmonia’s Principal Conductor Santtu-Matias Rouvali stretched it on the rack.

Boris Giltburg, Wigmore Hall review - tonal beauty trumps subjective romantics

★★★★ BORIS GILTBURG, WIGMORE HALL Tonal beauty trumps subjective romantics

Coruscating Chopin, Prokofiev and Ravel

What a difference a piano can make. Boris Giltburg, like Angela Hewitt, prefers a very special Fazioli over the Steinways which dominate the concert scene at the Wigmore Hall and elsewhere. While those may yield a greater depth of field, more appropriate for a 2000 seater venue, few pianists have wrought sound magic on them anything like the kind we heard throughout last night’s rich recital.

George Fu, St Martin-in-the-Fields review - high intellect and visceral shocks

★★★★★ GEORGE FU, ST MARTIN-IN-THE-FIELDS High intellect and visceral shocks

Chopin the modernist, Rzewski the electric in totally satisfying recital

Semi-standing ovation at a lunchtime concert in a London church? Predictable, perhaps, from the first recital I heard George Xiaoyuan Fu give at the Two Moors Festival, an avian programme which made me long to hear him play Messiaen’s complete Catalogue d’oiseaux. Yesterday’s “Chopin Revisited” sequence heightened the sense of originality in planning and confidence in presentation. This is one of the most exciting young pianists of our time, no question.

Grosvenor, RSNO, Chan, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall online review - too big for the small screen

★★★★ GROSVENOR, RSNO, CHAN, GLASGOW ROYAL CONCERT HALL ONLINE Polish modernism flanks Benjamin Grosvenor in Chopin's First Piano Concerto

Polish modernism flanks Benjamin Grosvenor in Chopin's First Piano Concerto

By chance, I started watching this streamed concert shortly after hearing a live BBC broadcast of the Philharmonia playing in front of an audience for the first time in over a year. Much though I love the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, steadfast companion over many Edinburgh winters, from student standby to bus pass, there is no doubt where I would have rather been.

Proust Night, Wigmore Hall review – the music of memory

★★★★ PROUST NIGHT, WIGMORE HALL A haunting, stylish trip into the novelist's sound-world

A haunting, stylish trip into the novelist's sound-world

In a bold first strike – straight to the gut, surely, for many in the audience – the Wigmore Hall’s “Proust Night” began with an old recording of the Berceuse from Fauré’s Dolly Suite. Clever. How apt that the signature tune from Listen With Mother (a beloved old BBC radio show of stories for younger children) should have been composed by a friend – and idol – of the writer whose own rapt entanglement in the mother-child bond threads through his life and work.