Thursday December 16th, 2021 - Pianist/composer Timo Andres (above) in recital at Merkin Hall. This evening's program, part of The Kaufman Music Center's Piano Dialogues series, grew out of the musical friendship of Mr. Andres with his fellow composers, Sarah Goldfeather and Eric Shanfield. Honoring the continuing influence of Robert Schumann’s piano music, Mr. Andres performed the composer's Waldszenen. Ms. Goldfeather's new work for Mr. Andres, and Mr. Shanfield's aptly titled new work, Timo Variations, based on a theme which Mr. Andres composed for Eric in 2019, completed the program.
I simply loved the new work by Sarah Goldfeather, entitled Fern Canyon, which opened the evening in its world premiere performance. Ms. Goldfeather could not have asked for a finer interpreter of her new work than Mr. Andres, a tall, bookish-looking fellow with beautiful hands.
Fern Canyon is at first whimsical and repetitive at the start, keeping in the piano's mid-range. Little flourishes turn up, and then the music gets more lyrical. Mr. Andres then lingers in the high range, with delicate figurations tickling the ear. Suddenly, the music turns grand, and Rachmaninoff springs immediately to mind. But the piece ends magically, with Mr. Andres keeping his foot on the pedal to sustain the sound of the final note, which hung beautifully on the air. Fern Canyon would make a wonderful dancework, in my view.
Without taking a break, Mr. Andres then commenced Schumann's Waldszenen, Opus 82. These nine short solo piano pieces were inspired by the German woodlands. In the Teutonic imagination, forests are ancient, restful, and - sometimes - eerily haunted places. Schumann's nine miniatures conjure up such visions of the woods.
Composed in 1849, this series of intimate scenes from Nature begins with Eintritt, the entry into a cool and shaded grove filled with forest murmurs. A simple, folkish tune emerges as the forest-stroller's eye wanders about.
Horn calls and the sounds of rifle-fire herald the human invasion of Nature's sanctuary; in Jäger auf der Lauer, huntsmen who have been stalking their prey break into wild pursuit. The music conveys the thrills of the chase.
The two ‘flower’ pieces that follow are very different in feeling: the simplicity of Einsame Blumen (Lonely Flowers) leads to the shadowy, flowing Verrufene Stelle (Haunted Places) which describes a dark red flower that draws its colour from Earth saturated with human blood.
Things brighten with Freundliche Landschaft (Friendly Landscape) while the coziness of sitting before the fire with a pint are evoked in the almost hymn-like Herberge (The Inn).
The best-known of the Waldszenen is Vogel als Prophet (Bird as Prophet), which captures a sonic image of forest birds, flitting from tree to tree. A central, more poetic passage praises the mystical powers of the forest's avian dwellers.
Then the music sings of hunters again: in Jagdlied (Hunting Song) the woodland sportsmen look forward to feasting on their catch of the day. The final Abschied (Farewell) was so affectingly played, but the jarring sound of a cellphone came at the worst possible moment.
Throughout this Schumann cycle, Mr. Andres's playing moved from the poetic to the passionate with a lovely mastery of dynamics, and an unfailingly distinctive style.
Eric Shanfield's Timo Variations brought the program to an end. The theme was Mr. Andres' own creation, brief and uncomplicated; thereafter the pianist embarked on a 9-variation journey, with a closing Aria. Theme I, Scheletrica ("emaciated, meager") features sharp accents. A reference to the Waldszenen comes next, in a brisk and brusk reply to Schumann's Vogel als Prophet. Then, bell-like sounds give way to rippling effects in the 3rd variation.
Variation 4 is marked Espressivo ('ritmico ma no meccanico') - "rhythmic but not mechanical" - wherein Mr. Andres followed those instructions to the letter. Variation 5 begins with a pulsing feeling, later flowing freely. Continuum (Variation 6) maintains a steadiness, then gives over to a fluttering feeling in Variation 7, which ends up expansively. In the 8th Variation, entitled Kreisleriana, flourishes are played over sustained notes before the music turns quite majestic. The 'delicate and precise' music of the 9th Variation is really fun to hear.
Each of these variations is rather longer than one might expect, but they are very inventive and pleasing to hear. Mr. Andres reveled in each of the variations Mr. Shanfield crafted for him. The Timo Variations end with a final Aria which is marked "Elegante", a word that truly describes Mr. Andres's playing.
I usually don't stay for post-performance talks, but this evening I was in no rush to get home, so we stayed to hear what Mssrs. Andres and Shanfield and Ms. Goldfeather had to say. Being well-acquainted with one another, the three hardly needed a moderator. They chatted blithely, and some interesting things popped up along the way: Ms. Goldfeather noted the influence of Rachmaninoff on Fern Canyon, and also revealed that she does not own a piano. Mr. Shanfield said that he owns a piano, but admits to being "a terrible pianist".
~ Oberon