To say that the diminutive Mr Kadouch is a very gifted young pianist with a brilliant technique and a bright future is an understatement. The program overall was very well-played. But the biblical adage “for unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required” came to mind – is this all there is? He is very musical and possessed of a prodigious technique – but what about that ineffable something that one sometimes hears, that moves us beyond words? Do we attend concerts to be impressed or to be moved? Back to that question later.
The program began with Haydn’s exquisite Variations in F minor. It had the air of a required inclusion, a token late-18th century piece on a program weighted heavily in Romantic through 20th century repertoire. Enough research has been done in the last 30 years in performance practice and historical instruments to have filtered into the mainstream (one would think), and this knowledge can indeed inform players of modern Steinways (it would be limiting and pointless to play Haydn only on historically-appropriate instruments). However, Kadouch over-pedaled to the point of consistently blurring harmonies as if he were playing a Romantic-era piece, which stripped the music of its pristine beauty.