Playing three 45-minute concerts in one afternoon is a herculean triumph. Even if done badly it is still a triumph. Mikhail Rudy did that and fortunately did it very well.
The three concerts took place on Sept. 10 at King's Place as part of their festival. The theme of all three was the Russian literature, which is rich with colorful, majestic, exotic and challenging pieces.
The first concert, which began at 2:30 P. M. had Rudy playing two selections from Peter Tchaikovsky's "Seasons." "Seasons" has twelve pieces, one for each month of the year. Rudy played "May" and "June." "June" is the most famous of the twelve and Rudy played it slower than I've usually heard it. He played it slow enough to give it a melancholic sigh that's at the heart of many of Tchaikovsky's best work.
The highlight of the first program was "Pictures at an Exhibition" by Modest Mussgorsky. This work has been rearranged a number of times, with Maurice Ravel arranging it for an orchestra and it's even been performed by the rock group Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Mikhail Rudy played the work as it first appeared, as a work for solo piano.
The work is a series of tone-sketches based on paintings of Mussorgsky's friend Viktor Hartmann. The names of the paintings - which were omitted from the program - are imaginative and the music recreates scenes of an old castle, a gnome, an ox-drawn cart and the Jardin des Tuileries at the Louvre. Rudy created them beautifully, although having the names in the program would have been better.
The second program began at 3:45 and Rudy was joined on stage by cellist Alexander Ivashkin to perform Sergei Prokofiev's cello sonata and Igor Stravinsky's Suite Italienne. Prokofiev's Cello Sonata was written near the end of the composer's life, shortly after he had been denounced by the Soviet government as "anti-people." He wrote it for the great cellist - and his great friend - Mstislav Rostropovich.
Despite the tragedy in Prokofiev's life, the piece is not melancholy, although it has a few tender moments which Ivashkin captured beautifully.
Stravinsky's "Suite Italiene" is a rearrangement for cello and piano of his ballet "Pulcinella." The ballet was the first of Stravinsky's neoclassical works and has melodies he believed were by early classical composer Giovanni Battista Pergolesi (hence "Italiene"). The work has plenty of avant-garde things in it that were part of Stravinsky's earlier style like the bow slapping the fingerboard.