The word 'prodigy' is unavoidable when writing about Benjamin Grosvenor, or so it appears for the headline writers. Having eschewed many big concert dates and growing as an artist in smaller halls, he is clearly setting himself up for the long haul. This ambitious, sold-out Cambridge concert showed both how brilliant a pianist he already is, and hinted at how far he could go in the future.
The programme set up a concert of two halves, the first more challenging interpretatively, the second showing off a notably catholic late-Romantic repertoire. The freedom of Grosvenor's playing in the Scriabin and Ravel, in particular, showed how shackled were his Bach and Chopin. Yet even here there was playing of startling virtuosity and musical understanding. In Bach's Partita no. 4, for instance, the quicker movements were perhaps too abrupt. Grosvenor's blurry ornaments and focus on the right hand obscured clarity and some details in pursuit of a harpsichord-like timbre. But in the Allemande Grosvenor combined neuroticism and stillness through subtle shading of the vocal line, managing to balance Bach's desolation and controlled rapture. The Aria juxtaposed puckishness and pomp, its cutely ornamented final chords delighting as much as the character brought to the Menuet. And in the Gigue there was, even if contrapuntal clarity again was sacrificed, an almost Ravelian lightness.
From the opening slash of the Chopin sonata onwards, Grosvenor's tone and style were of another generation. He is happy to take risks even if wrong notes follow, and refuses to play to the gallery unless it makes musical sense. His golden sound is worlds away from the glassy shallowness of many competition-soured pianists, the aristocratic subtlety of his phrasing recalling the mid-century greats. There is, of course, still a distance to go for this nineteen-year-old. The Chopin's Allegro maestoso first movement began in medias res, but lost intensity and structure as it progressed in fits and starts. The simplicity of the poised Largo was powerful, but it paled in comparison to the depths found earlier in the Bach. Yet in the terse Scherzo there was extraordinary lightness, and the torrential finale built exceptionally by contrasting galloping martial articulation with terrifying runs high up on the keyboard. Rubato was nuanced yet it told, and here was the existential drama missing from the first and third movements. One glimpsed the future, and through it the past.