Music
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ALPIN HONG'S DEBUT ALBUM
Brahms, Debussy, Scarlatti & Stravinsky
MSR Classics MS 1107
CD REVIEW
Stunning debut recital by Hong
Scarlatti. Brahms. Debussy. Stravinsky. Listening to the debut recital on CD by Los Angeles-born, Juilliard-educated Alpin Hong, an interesting picture came to my mind. I visualized the sort of feat a master juggler will sometimes set for himself, keeping four objects of dissimilar weight, shape, and texture - say, a rubber ball, an Indian club, a pineapple, and a bowling ball - in motion all at once. Without deciding which of our famous composers is going to play the role of the pineapple, I will say that Hong's range of interests as a young concert artist on the rise is likewise impressive.
The two Scarlatti selections are a contrasted pair: the diabolical Sonata in D Minor, L422, with its rapid-fire repetitive keys, leaps, and hand-crossings, and the Sonata in B minor, L33, with its poignant intimacy that seems almost to anticipate the Romantic Era. The Brahms selections are likewise choice: the six Klavierstücke, Op. 118. While young keyboard artists are apt to make a name for themselves with a killer technical prowess, Alpin Hong's Brahms shows us that, at the highest level, technique and the inmost understanding of the emotion in a work of music, what we are pleased to call "feeling," are really inseparable. These pieces may be impassioned, like Intermezzo No.1, or exquisitely tender like the Intermezzo No. 2, marked Andante teneramente and unforgettable once you have heard it. Joy, sorrow, and longing are found in abundance in Op. 118, perhaps the most far ranging of all Brahms' collections of piano pieces.
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