You might think you know the classical music scene in London, but I’ll bet that there are any number of concerts going on around the city that would take you completely by surprise. This was one of those for me: I had never been to St James’s Church, Paddington before, even though it’s clearly a very fine concert venue, and I’m afraid the two musicians performing – illustrious though their pedigrees are – were new to me as well. The high quality and enthusiastic reception of the event were a testament to the depth of classical music in the capital: we can moan about audience numbers all we like, but maybe we’re just looking in the wrong places.
The concert, organised by the MCS Young Artists Fund, featured Finnish organist Kalevi Kiviniemi and Georgian violinist Liana Isakadze. She may not have the same sort of foothold in the western European concert circuit as so many violinists today, but that’s not to say that she isn’t just as worthy of attention: she is a favourite player of David Oistrakh’s who served as his assistant for two years and has since founded an academy in his name in Ingolstadt, Germany. Isakadze’s playing has a clear mid 20th-century glint to it, with generous helpings of vibrato and a full, warm sound. She evidently relishes taking to the stage.
Isakadze performed twice this evening, giving two stalwarts of the violin repertoire: Bach’s D minor Partita in the first half, and Beethoven’s Violin Concerto in the second. That she never combined with Kiviniemi was a disappointment of the programming, but these two monumental pieces are still impressive enough to take on within a single concert. Her Bach playing had little of the clean, “historically informed” edge that contemporary listeners might expect, instead going down a more traditional, Romanticized road. The Chaconne was forcefully presented, oozing passion and grandeur, but also with all the great technical control that the piece demands. It was an impressive, audience-pleasing rendition.