I met Lang Lang on a sultry London day shortly after he
had made his Proms debut with the St Petersburg Philharmonic in a performance
of Rachmaninov’s Third Piano Concerto. This week, Lang Lang makes another
debut – at the Wigmore Hall. These debuts could not be more different
– one so public it achieved a global radio audience, the other so private
as to be strikingly intimate by comparison. His Wigmore debut has long
been sold out yet Lang Lang is well aware of the contrasts. He describes
the atmosphere of performing at the Proms as something epic, ‘rather
like being in the movie Gladiator with all the tigers’. It is an apt
description for a concert hall which looks the part – its own arena,
the colisseumed stalls and an audience which bays in much the same way.
The concerto performance, which was recorded for future
release, was in some ways a perfect symbiosis of ‘Russianness’ for Lang
Lang. ‘Playing with them was wonderful – they have a really Russian
sound, and I have worked with Temirkanov on a number of occasions –
at Carnegie Hall, in St Petersburg and throughout Asia.’ It was Lang
Lang who decided that the Rachmaninov Third would be the ideal choice
for the Proms, ‘it’s such a great Russian piece and I really wanted
to make this work my first concerto disc’. It is a formidable choice
because there are so many great recordings of the work available, yet
Lang Lang has at his disposal a technique which is incandescent, even
if these are perhaps his first thoughts on a piece which will later
achieve even greater interpretative depth. Indeed, such is his growing
reputation, particularly in the US, that one writer termed him ‘a talent
in a million’.
Although he is still only 19 years old, he has achieved
a quite extraordinary depth of repertoire for one so young. ‘Since I
have been in America I have learnt 35 concertos. But the thing about
the Rachmaninov is that that everyone thinks it is the hardest to play
and in some ways it is, not only in terms of technique, but also in
the way it needs to sound’. This question of technique is not purely
for the sake of virtuosity it appears: he may well have chosen the longer,
more difficult cadenza for the concerto but for his debut recording
he chose to play the revised version of the Second Sonata. ‘I don’t
think that version of the Second Sonata is any less difficult than the
original; the original has more notes, but the revised is much clearer
in its intent.’
It is often the case, indeed music history is littered
with examples of it, that a young artist makes his impression through
the misfortune of others (Jon Vickers, Joan Sutherland, Sir Colin Davis
and Esa-Pekka Salonen are just four who benefited from someone’s indisposition
to launch international careers). Some artists, however, will defy the
gravity of chance in any case (and Lang Lang, like Kissin, would probably
have succeeded with out this boost) but it is not difficult to see that
Lang Lang has had his element of luck. It was in August 1999 that he
replaced an ailing André Watts to perform the opening movement
of Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto at Ravinia and in March 2000 he
replaced Richard Goode to give a recital in Chicago at Orchestra Hall.
In both cases the reviews were ecstatic.
His admiration for pianists in Rachmaninov is as expected
– Horowitz, Rachmaninov himself and his current teacher Gary Graffman.
‘Graffman has helped in many ways, but particularly in terms of repertoire,
concertos and recitals. The greatest help was in being made how to think
about music. When we have a session together it is not just about do
this do that it’s really about looking at a certain passage, being made
to think about it. That’s the really important aspect of the teaching.
Graffman is a great pianist – he was taught by Horowitz. I think I will
learn a lot from him’.
Lang Lang’s debut disc revealed a surprisingly varied
repertoire from Haydn to Brahms and Rachmaninov to Balakirev. Similarly,
his concerto repertoire is quite wide-ranging. ‘I play the concertos
of Liszt, Chopin, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninov, Grieg, Schumann, some Mozart
and have just learnt the Brahms concertos. I find both the Brahms concertos
equally difficult, but the Grieg is particularly hard. I thought it
was quite a simple piece before I played it. It’s difficult to know
what he means – everyone can play it, but knowing how to play it is
the difficult thing.’
Lang Lang is part of a generation where live recordings
are increasingly in vogue. ‘I very much prefer making live recordings.
I feel I create more things in a live performance, and I also think
it is more real. I think that in the studio something is lost. It is
not that there is generally more taste to a studio recording – even
then there are wrong notes – just that I prefer the frisson of live
performance and recording.’
That Wigmore Hall debut – which follows on from recitals
in Paris and Italy – shrewdly keeps to the same repertoire that he recorded
on his debut disc recorded at Tanglewood. ‘In part, this is to boost
sales of the discs!’ Yet, Lang Lang holds a venerable attitude towards
the Wigmore believing, from hearsay, that it has one of the best acoustics
of all recital halls. In part this is true, but as I point out to him
it has a dangerous acoustic for a first time pianist in that piano tone
has to be projected more gently. He is effortlessly grateful for the
advice!
His future is to some extent planned for the next five
years – there are concerts around the world (including a Tchaikovsky
First next year with the LPO under Eschenbach), recitals, chamber music
and so on. ‘The problem is, when you play a lot you don’t have much
time for study and all the other things that are important. That’s partly
why I try to do other things as often possible – I read a lot of Shakespeare,
for example.’ Favourite play, I wonder? ‘Hamlet’, he replies. ‘It’s
a tragedy…a BIG tragedy, and I think that helps you play the piano a
bit more deeply than you otherwise might’. Forever the pedagogue, I
tell him to read King Lear.
Those five years – when everything is planned for him
– rather begs the question of how much time he will take to ensure that
life moves at his own pace. ‘I have toured and played so widely in Asia,
before moving to America, that I think I have quite a bit of experience,
but my management are not really pushing me. But I feel I must have
time to enjoy life and to be a normal kid, have time off and watch football
and so on. You must be able to do the normal things or you’ll end up
tired and no life will no longer be enjoyable’. Outside music, he loves
cinema, ‘I loved Gladiator’. ‘I play Ping Pong, like watching basketball,
American football, buying books to read – normal things.’ With that,
he asks me what he should do for the rest of his time in London, particularly
what is worth sightseeing. He asks me about the guided bus tours. I
tell him about the London Eye…all of a sudden the tables are turned
and he is asking me the questions.
Marc Bridle
November 2001
Lang Lang’s website is at: www.langlang.com