Michael Ierace's piano recital last night in Linton, Cambridgeshire was revelatory. That adjective is perhaps devalued through overuse, but this young Australian pianist's playing does indeeed reveal the strong, the beautiful, and the unexpected in music one might believe one already knows.
When Ierace, from Adelaide, won a Royal College of Music student competition as a postgraduate in 2008, a jury member told me that Ierace's playing of the Beethoven Bagatelles had made him want to explore the pieces afresh.
In the past three years Ierace has been steadily picking up prizes in competitions. He won the Royal Overseas League piano final in 2008, and has just carried off their accompanists' award. He was a prizewinner at the Haverhill International soloists competition. He currently has a fellowship in accompaniment at the Royal College.
His playing has become more assured and powerful in the past three years, and his platform manner is less unassuming than it was. Last night's solo recital at Linton Music Society in Cambridgeshire contained formidable - and close to faultless - displays of virtuosity, with a big sound which would have carried to the back of the larger halls for which Ierace is now ready. Among the fireworks were astonishing, quieter moments, when his playing drew the listener deep into the music itself and revealed its essence.
In Schumann's Kinderszenen, played before the interval, the softly intense and slow ending of Der Dichter Spricht (The Poet Speaks) had the audience spellbound. On the page, this passage is just a series of minims, shaped in a diminuendo down from pianissimo. In Ierace's hands, the line of narrative was sustained, the poet was speaking from the very depths of the soul.