Royal Festival Hall, London
In the first of the Royal Philharmonic’s Lights in the Dark series, Boris Giltburg’s Emperor Concerto had delicacy and grace, and the Rite of Spring and Berg's Three Pieces for Orchestra were persuasive and lovingly shaped

Compared with most opening announcements, this was dramatic: the previous morning the pianist Paul Lewis, due to be the soloist in Beethoven’s Emperor Concerto with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, had been hit by a car. Happily he’s expected to make a quick recovery. And the Beethoven went ahead, with Boris Giltburg as a luxury stand-in.

This reunited Giltburg and the conductor Vasily Petrenko, who have recorded all Beethoven’s piano concertos together, and their familiarity smoothed the way to a more polished performance than the circumstances might have suggested. Giltburg, characteristically, played with firm delicacy, dovetailing nicely with the warm-toned orchestra. He threw in the odd thunderous moment but tended more towards understatement, as in the haunting music-box passage of the first movement and the hushed transition to the finale. In that movement he struck a fine balance of grace and exuberance; but his encore, Schumann’s Arabeske in C, seemed calibrated to a more intimate level, Giltburg’s introspective playing making us lean in and listen.

Continue reading...