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			 Nobuyuki Tsujii - Live at Carnegie Hall 
     John MUSTO (b. 1954)
     
              Improvisation and Fugue (2008) [7:44]  
              Ludwig van BEETHOVEN (1770-1827)
     
              Piano Sonata No. 17 in D minor, Op. 31 No. 2 ‘The Tempest’ 
              (1801-1802) [21:40]  
              Franz LISZT (1811-1886)
     
              3 Etudes de concert, S144/R5: No. 3 in D flat, ‘Un Sospiro’ 
              (1845-1849) [5:27]  
              Rigoletto: Paraphrase de concert, S434/R267 (1855-?1859) 
              [8:51]  
              Modest MUSSORGSKY (1839-1881)
     Pictures at an Exhibition (1874) [33:00]
     Stephen FOSTER (1826-1864)
     Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair (1854) (arr. Nobuyuki
Tsujii) [5:48]
     Fryderyk CHOPIN (1810-1849)
     
              Prelude No. 15 in D flat major, Op. 28 No. 15 ‘Raindrop’ 
              (1835-1839) [5:36]  
              Nobuyuki TSUJII (b. 1988)
     
              Elegy for the Victims of the Earthquake and Tsunami of March 11, 
              2011 (2011) [4:31]  
             
            Nobuyuki Tsujii (piano)
 
			rec. live, Carnegie Hall, New York, 10 November 2011
     Producer/director: Peter Rosen
     Picture: NTSC / 16:9 / 1080i Full-HD
     Sound: PCM Stereo / dts-HD Master Audio 5.1
     Region: 0 (worldwide)
 
                
              EUROARTS 205 9084   
              [97:00]  
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                  Few recitals come as freighted with praise and promise as this. 
                  The young Japanese pianist-composer Nobuyuki Tsujii was just 
                  two when his musical ability was first recognised; he started 
                  formal piano studies at four and won his first prize at the 
                  age of seven. At 10 he played with an orchestra for the first 
                  time, making his solo debut two years later. Other milestones 
                  passed in quick succession; he received the Critics’ Prize 
                  at the 2005 Chopin competition, trumping that with a gold medal 
                  at the Van Cliburn competition in 2009. Remarkable by any standards; 
                  even more so as Nobuyuki Tsujii is blind, and has been since 
                  birth.  
                     
                  One just has to read the fulsome praise for this Carnegie Hall 
                  concert to realise one is in the presence of an artist of rare 
                  character and formidable ability. Sighted pianists will spend 
                  years poring over complex scores, yet this young man has to 
                  learn them by ear. Even the most cursory glance at this challenging 
                  programme confirms what a feat that is; and if that weren’t 
                  enough, Tsujii has written music for film and television as 
                  well.  
                     
                  Given these talents it’s entirely apt that he kicks off 
                  with the Improvisation and Fugue by fellow pianist-composer 
                  John Musto. It’s a fiendishly difficult opener, its jazzy 
                  rhythms overlaid with breathtaking runs and powerful, punishing 
                  chords; clearly the piece holds no terrors for Tsujii. Indeed, 
                  it only takes a few seconds to understand that this is no one-trick 
                  wannabe but an artist of considerable substance and style. There’s 
                  colour, there’s brio and there’s humour, and it 
                  leaves one slack-jawed in wonderment. The piano sound - in PCM 
                  stereo at least - is firm and full-bodied, the detail of Musto’s 
                  bravura writing crystal clear at all times. The picture is sharp 
                  and vibrant as well, although I don’t much care for those 
                  meandering pans across the packed hall.  
                     
                  A promising start and a glimpse of what to expect from the tempest-toss’d 
                  sonata that follows. There’s terrific weight and thrust 
                  to Tsujii’s playing here, and his articulation is always 
                  impressive. Most revealing is the sense of liberation, of a 
                  piece broken out of amber and allowed to move and breathe in 
                  the most natural and instinctive way. Not everyone will warm 
                  to his Beethoven, but few could doubt its freshness and, yes, 
                  its modernity. Tsujii draws glowing colours from his Steinway 
                  and there are moments when those familiar harmonies and progressions 
                  catch one by surprise. That’s rare in such oft-heard pieces, 
                  and it adds to the sense of renewal and rediscovery. Is it a 
                  great performance? Perhaps not. An illuminating and provocative 
                  one? Most certainly.  
                     
                  The two Liszt encores are rather special though. From the glorious 
                  susurrations of its opening bars ‘Un sospiro’ roams 
                  and ripples in a way I’ve seldom encountered before. Tsujii 
                  also brings out the music’s inner voices, these hidden 
                  splendours uncovered as if for the very first time. In fact, 
                  there are moments when this young man could easily take his 
                  place alongside legendary Lisztians - the patrician Arrau especially 
                  - such is the nobility and breadth of his conception. I always 
                  rejoice in the surge and passion of this music, but I can’t 
                  remember being as moved by it as I was here. As for the Rigoletto 
                  paraphrase, all I can say is that Tsujii is as grand and glittering 
                  as one could wish for; more important, he builds, sustains and 
                  quickens the drama in true Verdian style.  
                     
                  Tsujii is just as instinctive and dramatic in the Mussorgsky, 
                  where each of Hartmann’s evocative pictures is painted 
                  in the boldest of colours and strongest of contrasts. That said, 
                  he brings a wistful, doodling charm to the first of the linking 
                  Promenades, which makes Gnomus and Il vecchio 
                  castello seem more imposing than usual. I did wonder whether 
                  such dynamic extremes masked a lack of subtlety and insight, 
                  but one only has to hear how he characterises the chatter of 
                  chicks and fishwives - not to mention the rhythmic sway of that 
                  ox-cart - to know such fears are groundless.  
                     
                  Even more impressive is the huge weight and range of sonorities 
                  Tsujii coaxes from his piano in the later Promenades, 
                  The Catacombs and The Hut on Fowl’s Legs. 
                  The sound on this Blu-ray is equally revealing, Mussorgsky’s 
                  more subtle harmonies most faithfully caught. Indeed, the sophisticated 
                  textures Tsujii teases out of Cum mortuis are simply 
                  astonishing, the climactic Great Gate at Kiev evoked 
                  in playing - and sonics - of thrilling heft and grandeur. Not 
                  surprisingly, the atmosphere in the hall is electric, the applause 
                  thunderous; and so it should be, for it’s a truly epic 
                  reading of this great score.  
                     
                  That would have been more than enough to send me home in good 
                  humour, but the audience demands - and gets - three gorgeous 
                  encores. Tsujii’s arrangement of the Stephen Foster parlour 
                  song is just delightful, the homespun quality of the original 
                  - and its hint of jangling joanna - easily heard in this affectionate 
                  little homage. As for Chopin’s ‘Raindrop’ 
                  prelude, it emerges with a pleasing sense of poise and scale 
                  - and a depth of feeling - that makes the piece seem even more 
                  of a miracle than it is. Tsujii ends with his gentle elegy to 
                  the victims of the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. It’s a 
                  modest and unassuming work, whose serene central theme is firm 
                  and indomitable; the writing is just as assured as the playing. 
                   
                     
                  After reading those effusive comments on the box I was determined 
                  to take a cooler, more rational view of this pianist. As it 
                  happens I’m now utterly convinced Nobuyuki Tsujii is that 
                  rarest of creatures, a unique and precious talent that marries 
                  technical prowess with daunting levels of insight and flair. 
                  Indeed, as he plays he constantly looks around him, as if responding 
                  to the commands of a hidden muse; it’s rather distressing 
                  at first, but that sense of invisible communion strikes me as 
                  an apt and powerful metaphor for his artistry. My only grumble 
                  is that the audience - like so many these days - is much too 
                  quick to applaud; it’s especially irritating at the end 
                  of the Beethoven. Equally ill-considered is the keyboard cam 
                  that captures Tsujii in vertiginous - and unflattering - close-up. 
                  Very small niggles in an otherwise top-notch presentation.  
                     
                  A profound and bewitching talent; inspiring in every way.  
                     
                  Dan Morgan  
                  http://twitter.com/mahlerei  
                   
                   
                  Masterwork Index: Pictures 
                  at an exhibition  
                  
                   
                 
             
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