Rita Reichman - Distinguished Chopin Interpreter

June 29, 2010

By George Laverock


The piano bard, the piano rhapsodist, the piano mind, the piano soul is Chopin. Tragic, romantic, lyric, heroic, dramatic, fantastic, soulful, sweet, dreamy, brilliant, grand, simple: all possible expressions are found in his compositions, and all are sung by him upon his instrument.” Anton Rubinstein, pianist, composer and conductor (1829-94)


Last year, I had the pleasure of spending two months in Melbourne, Australia... a city that has much in common with Vancouver. I was very impressed with the vibrancy of the cultural life there, and more specifically the music scene (with several jazz festivals, chamber music and other classical events, two orchestras, excellent opera, and several fine institutions offering advanced musical training).


I was lucky to arrive in Melbourne only months after the opening of the splendid new Melbourne Recital Centre, an 1100-seat hall that any city would be proud of. As part of its first season, the distinguished Australian pianist Rita Reichman presented a recital of works by Haydn, Schubert, Debussy and Brahms. For our festival concert (August 10 at Christ Church Cathedral), her all-Chopin program will be anchored by the great Sonata No. 3 in B minor. She will also perform this famous sonata at the Hornby Island Festival on August 7, as one of our outreach concerts in the Windsor Plywood Spectacular Music B.C. series.


I can’t wait to hear this all-Chopin program. What I heard in Melbourne was a powerful and poised performance by an artist who really excels in classical and romantic music. It’s not surprising that she plays this music with such authority, as her principal teachers came from a lineage directly connected with Chopin himself (Rudolph Serkin, Mieczyslaw Horszowski and George Bolet). Her CD recording “The Chopin Collection” is a must for lovers of romantic piano music.


Reichman was somewhat of a child prodigy, and after studying at the famous Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia (where she was the youngest-ever graduate), she pursued a major career in the USA and the UK. Since returning to her native Australia over 10 years ago, she has focused her efforts on mentoring and teaching younger talents Down Under. She’s been the Head of Piano at the Australian National Academy of Music for some years, the founder of the Australian Young Musicians Academy and a guest lecturer at Monash University – an Australian school with a strong musical tradition.


When friends ask me what they should not miss at our 10th anniversary festival, I encourage them to put a circle around August 10 in their diaries so they can enjoy one of the best interpreters of Chopin on the planet!


P.S. If you want to hear Rita Reichman’s personal insights into Chopin’s music, be sure to attend her free “Inside the Music” talk/demonstration the day before her concert. That’s Monday afternoon, August 9 at 2pm at Christ Church.

Counting Down to our Opening Night - Celebracion!
June 21, 2010
By George
Laverock

It's hard to believe that in less than ten weeks our 10th festival will have begun! Between now and August 16, hundreds of artists will be coming to the West Coast, many for the first time, and all to help us celebrate our 10th anniversary.


I have had a lot of fun putting together this year’s program, and we are very proud that we are bringing great musicians from 9 countries to enhance Vancouver’s musical life in August.


This year we are starting on a Friday night, and unlike last year when the Orpheum was closed for Olympic renovations, we are back in the big theatre for our Odlum Brown Opening Night – Celebración!

I can promise you that it will be an evening that will make you want to dance (which apparently is illegal in civic theatres!). In this extravaganza of Latin sounds, we have musicians from Argentina, Cuba, the USA and Canada... happy music with a strong sense of rhythm. We are so pleased to be able to bring back the Adrián Iaies Trio (from Buenos Aires), who were a hit at our 2008 Festival. They will get things under way on August 6, with intimate trio sounds that resonate with tango flavours. Then trumpeter Miguelito Valdés will join the trio for at least one song, as we could not do an evening like this without saluting Cuba and the many wonderful musicians we have had in the past from that highly cultured island. Miguelito is also a member of Vancouver’s popular Latin group Zapato Negro, so he will be staying on the stage for the second set. Then John Korsrud and his 22-piece Orquesta Goma Dura will heat things up with a set of their powerful arrangements. After intermission, the headliner group, the Poncho Sanchez Latin Jazz Band will show is why they are considered the hottest Latin jazz band on the continent.


I’ll be back next week to tell you about some of the immensely talented Australian musicians that are coming.